Assailants slit the throats of a mother and her three children Wednesday in
southern Iraq, where the family had fled to escape threats that they had
cooperated with the Americans.
The mother's sister was also slain in the savage attack, which occurred in an
apartment in the southern city of Basra, police said. Five other family members
were rescued before they bled to death.
Officials said the family had fled Baghdad for Basra after receiving threats
because they had cooperated with US forces. The officials gave no further
details and spoke on condition of anonymity because they feared reprisals by
sectarian militias that have infiltrated Basra's police.
Sunni leaders, meanwhile, said 20 Sunnis who work for a government
organization that maintains mosques and shrines of that Muslim sect were
abducted in two areas of Baghdad. Sunni officials demanded the Shiite-led
security forces do more to stop sectarian kidnappings and killings.
There were conflicting reports whether the employees of the Sunni Endowment
were seized late Tuesday or Wednesday. The organization announced it was
suspending its work for a week to protest the kidnapping and demanded its
employees be freed.
The head of the organization, a major institution among the country's Sunni
community, blamed "militias in official uniforms" for the wave of kidnappings.
The choice of words suggested he was referring to Shiite militiamen who have
infiltrated the defense and interior ministries and who Sunnis blame for killing
civilians.
Sheik Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samaraie told reporters there would be no work
at the endowment's offices for a week in protest.
"I call upon the president and the prime minister to set up checkpoints in
tense areas to prevent the killings," Ghafour al-Samaraie told reporters.
The kidnapping occurred as part of a wave of sectarian violence that
escalated after the bombing of a Shiite shrine in Samarra in February and a July
1 car bombing that killed 66 people in the Shiite district of Sadr City.
In a joint statement Wednesday, America's two top officials in Iraq deplored
the surge in sectarian violence and called on the Iraqi people to unite against
"the terrorists and death squads."
Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and Gen. George W. Casey also called on Iraq's
leaders "to take responsibility and pursue reconciliation not just in words, but
through deeds as well."
The statement reflected U.S. disappointment that the national unity
government, which took office May 20, has faltered in its attempts to win public
trust, calm sectarian tensions and persuade Sunni-led insurgents to lay down
their weapons.
Instead, the situation in Iraq has gotten worse.
On Tuesday, the United Nations said nearly 6,000 civilians were slain across
Iraq in May and June, a spike in deaths that coincided with rising sectarian
attacks across the country.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, accused al-Qaida in Iraq of
targeting civilians because it is afraid to face Iraqi security forces. He vowed
the attacks would not undermine his efforts toward national reconciliation.
But deputy Prime Minister Salam al-Zubaie, a Sunni Arab, blamed US and
other coalition forces for much of the violence, saying their troops were
responsible for about half the deaths due to "raids, shootings and clashes with
insurgents."
"They came to protect the people and democracy and all the problems we have
today are because of them. It is a loss for Iraq," al-Zubaie said.
Kurdish legislator Mahmoud Othman said the UN report makes clear that if
the situation continues, "catastrophe will hit the country."
"The UN report is a warning to officials and politicians that the situation
is very bad and they have to be careful and solve it, but the government cannot
find a solution," Othman said.
At least 30 people were killed Wednesday, including one Iraqi who died when
two rockets struck the heavily fortified Green Zone, where the US and British
embassies are located. Two Iraqis were wounded in the attack, the US military
said.
One Salvadoran soldier died Wednesday and another was wounded in a bombing
near Kut, southwest of Baghdad, his country's defense minister said. It was the
third fatality among Salvadoran troops since the Central American nation sent
forces in 2003.
Sixteen other bodies were found in widely separate parts
of the country, apparent victims of sectarian death squads.