Alwaght- Following abduction of 18 Turkish
workers in Baghdad’s Sadr District on September 2, and the Iraqi
army‘s 52th brigade attack on Iraq’s
Hezbollah Brigade headquarters in Baghdad, Ahmad al-Assadi the Iraqi Public
Mobilization Forces’ (PMF) spokesman has noted that attacking the headquarters
has been carried out without coordinating the Public Mobilization Forces or
other responsible authorities. This incident comes as a result of a disharmony,
hoping not to be repeated, Assadi added. The spokesman said, sarcastically, the
Friday night’s incident was a task between the security forces and the Public
Mobilization Forces that as usual was performed without any coordination
.
However, conflict has not ended at this point, as Salim al-Jabouri, the speaker of Iraq’s parliament and head of largest Iraqi Sunni parliamentary coalition, all of a sudden, announced that the National Guard Law will be set for vote on September 8.
The National Guard Law was considered for debate in the Iraqi parliament while the Shiite National coalition had already agreed on conditions of draft of the law that would challenge and undermine the historical potential of the Shiite forces in Iraq.
Charges grow, Public Mobilization Forces ordered out of Baghdad’s second line of defense
Following the consideration of the abrupt vote plan on the
National Guard Law, the Iraqi defense ministry’s intelligence office claimed
that the Iraq’s Hezbollah Brigades were accountable for abduction of the 18 Turkish workers. The intelligence office also accused the
brigades of abducting the Iraqi clerics as well as intellectuals, adding that
in addition to finding the abducted, it would attempt to disarm those who
exploit their arms for matters other than the operations defined by the Iraqi
defense ministry
.At the same day Mohamad al-Hattab, the member of security committee of Baghdad’s provincial council noted that in some areas in Baghdad where Public Mobilization Forces’s offices are located, high rates of violence and extortion is seen. Therefore, the Baghdad’s operations command is considering measures to provide security in the capital. Meanwhile, Sheikh Abdel Wahab al-Samaraee, the Iraq’s Council of Scholars’ spokesman, has called for the "iron fist" in confrontation with paramilitary forces that kill people, abduct them and plunder their possessions. He claimed that the process started by those how carry weapons out of the defined and determined frameworks would not be limited to the killing of clerics, preachers, doctors and the academics.
The events did not end in remarks by a set of Iraqi
politicians and other influential figures, as this time the Iraqi Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi, the country's Commander-in-Chief, entered the
dispute, ordering the Public Mobilization Forces withdrawal from Baghdad’s
second line of defense. The Prime Minister has tasked the police and
counter-terrorism authorities and Kurdistan Region's forces with securing parts
of the second line of defense, as he assigned 8th armored brigade as well as 6th and 17th
divisions of the Iraqi army to protect other parts of the second line of
defense. These Army units are responsible for maintenance of Baghdad’s first
line of defense. Some of the Public Mobilization Forces were accommodated
in customs office, old cars garage, dairy products company storehouse and
former army bases in Abu Ghraib, Yusufyia, and Al-Ataremia, Al-Rezwanya
neighborhoods in Baghdad’s west, north and south. They brace for the PM’s any
possible order to be deployed to the frontlines
.
Retaliatory reactions
Two days after 2th-5th September disputes, attacks on the Public Mobilization Forces resumed, both legally and verbally. However, the pro-Popular Forces members in the parliament responded to verbal attacks on PMF. The Badr Organization parliamentary block, a Shiite organization headed by Ayatollah Sayyed Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, on September 7 in the parliament’s session, argued that the National Guard Law is an American plan designed on US’s ambassador to Iraq Stuart E. Jones’ advice, intending to pave the way for partitioning Iraq. The objection of Badr Organization is against a part of the National Guard Law which proposes formation of independent forces for every province operating under the command of the provincial council, an issue helping push the province towards a federal organization.
While a majority of the opponents of the proposed law emphasized that enactment of the Ntional Guard law would likely put the country at the risk of partitioning, Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, a Shiite parliamentary group, essentially opposed the law saying it is a plot against the Public Mobilization Forces.
Following the events the head of Baghdad operational command Lieutenant General Abdul Amir al-Shammari once again resurfaced on September 8 the Sadr District’s case of kidnapping 18 Turkish workers, directing the charges against the infiltrators in the Public Mobilization Forces, adding that after storming the popular forces' headquarters a huge amount of arms were discovered, which are desperately needed in the frontlines. He sarcastically noted that those who have a hand in arms trafficking could also engage in abduction. Responding to the charges, Hezbollah Brigades have aired video depicting confessions of an ISIS commander captured by the Shiite force, acknowledging that there is a secret cooperation between the army and the terrorist group setting up for penetrating into the capital Baghdad.
As the quarrels set to continue, on September 8, a collection of Shiite resistant groups including Iraq’s Hezbollah Brigades, Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, Imam Ali Brigades, Nojaba' Movement, Salah al-Din Brigades, Jund al-Imam, Babylon Brigades, Ansar AL-Awfia Movement and Sayyid al-Shuhada Movement issued a statement in a press conference read by Abu Talib al-Saeedi the spokesman for Hezbollah Brigades, explicitly rejecting the controversial National Guard Law.
In a retaliatory action, the “powerful coalition”, a coalition including Sunni parties, has held the Prime Minister and the security authorities responsible for disorder across the country which spurs the paramilitary forces to “commit crimes”. The coalition’s spokesman Ahmed al-Massari has connected the acts of abduction, attacking the clerics and intellectuals to the intensified anti-corruption protests in the recent weeks, adding that these crimes are committed by the paramilitary forces, in a reference to Public Mobilization Forces, moving freely in the city streets, “on their SUVs”.
Meanwhile, National Iraqi Alliance, an Iraqi electoral coalition mainly composed of Shiite parties, organized a press conference in which Hasan Salem, as the coalition's representative, noted that passing the National Guard Law in its current form is actually plotting against PMF taking who are fighting against ISIS, saying that this law is a supplement for the decisions made in Doha’s Iraq conferenceheld on September 7 and attended by members of Iraq’s dissolved party Ba'ath, a Saddam Hussein-time ruling party, as well as some former officials wanted on terror charges. The former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki also got into the controversy. In a press conference, highlighting negative sentiments against Doha conference and the drawbacks clearly visible in the National Guard Law, Maleki has said that he doubted that the law would be enacted.