UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
19:44 Mecca time, 16:44 GMT
 
News Middle East
Street battles reported in Basra

British forces pulled out of Basra's city
centre recently[Reuters]

Fierce street clashes between security forces and fighters of the Mahdi army have been reported from Basra, Iraq's second largest city.
 
But the city's chief police official insisted Basra was calm on Tuesday and the security forces were firmly in control.
Abdul Jalil Khalaf, Basra's police commissioner, told Al Jazeera: "The present situation in Basra is entirely calm and there were no manifestations of clashes or armed gunmen.
Sources earlier said armed supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr had taken control of the city after fighting erupted over the killing of a Mahdi army leader at a checkpoint.
 
Witnesses said Mahdi army fighters ignored al-Sadr's recent appeal for holding fire and fought street battles with government forces. 

The British military said leaders of political parties in Basra had held urgent talks to calm tensions in the city after the clashes.

Major Jamie Halford-Macleod, a British military spokesman, said shots had been fired at the Shatt-al-Arab Hotel, headquarters of the Iraqi security forces, in the north of the city.

Turf war

Halford-Macleod said armed men also opened fire on the provincial joint co-ordination centre, from where British forces pulled out in late August as part of their withdrawal from the city centre to their main base on the outskirts of Basra.

The riverside city of more than 1 million people has witnessed a turf war between rival Shia groups, including the Mahdi army, the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, and the smaller Fadhila party which controls the governorate.

Earlier reports from Basra said Major-General Mohan al-Firaiji, commander of Iraqi security operations in the city, fled during the fighting.

But Halford-Macleod said al-Firaiji was meeting leaders of political parties.

"We maintain overall responsibility for Basra province and will respond as deemed necessary. Certainly there is no request from General Mohan [al-Firaiji] for any assistance from us," he said.

Khalaf said fighting had subsided. "The situation has been put under control while army and police patrols are deployed in all parts of Basra.  Major general Mohan al-Feraiji is moving around the town to supervise security measures."

"We are determined to maintain law and order, while those who violate the law would be severely punished."

 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
 
ARTICLE TOOLS
 Email Article  Email article
 Print Article  Print article
 Send Feedback  Send feedback
 Share article  Share article