|  Soldiers and residents 
 celebrate in Falluja, 50 km (30 miles) west of Baghdad July 29, 2007, 
 after the Iraq team won the final game of the 2007 AFC Asian Cup soccer 
 tournament against Saudi Arabia in Jakarta. [Reuters]
 
  | 
Baghdad - Tens of thousands of Iraqis from the Shiite south to the 
Kurdish-dominated north poured into the usually treacherous streets Sunday to 
celebrate a rare moment of joy and unity when the national team won Asia's most 
prestigious soccer tournament. 
The revelers spanning the country's sectarian and ethnic divisions danced, 
sang and waved flags and posters of the team after Iraq beat three-time champion 
Saudi Arabia 1-0 to take the Asian Cup. 
Chants of "Long live Iraq" and "Baghdad is victorious" rang out across the 
country as Iraqis basked in national pride. Some of the revelers -- mostly men 
-- took their shirts off to display the red, white and black colors of the Iraqi 
flag painted on their chests. 
Reporters of the state Iraqiya television wrapped themselves with the 
national flag as they interviewed people celebrating in the streets. Some joined 
in the chanting. 
Within seconds of the final whistle, celebratory gunfire echoed across 
Baghdad and elsewhere despite a government ban and the threat of arrest by 
authorities. 
At least four people were killed and scores wounded by the gunfire. But as 
night fell on the country, there were no reports of bombings such as those that 
killed at least 50 and wounded dozens in Baghdad during celebrations of Iraq's 
semifinal win over South Korea on Wednesday. 
Authorities said they foiled a potential car bomber in southwestern Baghdad 
after he refused to stop at a checkpoint and appeared headed toward a crowd of 
revelers. Iraqi authorities had banned vehicles in and around the capital from 
shortly before the game began until early Monday to prevent a repeat of last 
week's violence. 
"The victory of our Iraqi soccer team is a wonderful gift to Iraqis who have 
been suffering from the killing, car bombs, abductions and other violent acts," 
said Falah Ibrahim, a 44-year-old resident of Baghdad's predominantly Shiite 
Sadr City district. 
 
 
 |  | 
 
 | The 
 Iraq team celebrate after their win over Saudi Arabia in the final match 
 at the 2007 AFC Asian Cup soccer tournament at the Gelora Bung Karno 
 stadium in Jakarta July 29, 2007. 
[Reuters] | 
Sunday's dramatic win capped a three-week campaign by Iraqi team, nicknamed 
"The Lions of the Two Rivers." Iraqis were captivated and spoke of hope, even as 
years of violence and sectarian strife have many asking if ethnically and 
religiously divided Iraq can survive as one nation. 
The team's players do not live in Iraq and earn their wages playing for teams 
across the Middle East. Because of tenuous security at home, wars and U.N. 
sanctions, the team had not played a home game in 17 years and must train and 
practice abroad. 
"We are celebrating because this team represents all Iraqi sects," said Awas 
Khalid, one of the thousands of Kurds who celebrated the win in the city of 
Sulaimaniyah in the Kurdish north, where secessionist sentiment has been on the 
rise. 
"This team is for everyone," Khalid said, as revelers around him waved Iraqi 
and Kurdish flags and chanted "Baghdad is victorious" in Arabic instead of their 
native Kurdish language. 
The mixed makeup of the winning national team was interpreted by many Iraqis 
as proof that politicians are more concerned with their narrow sectarian agendas 
than national interest, thus preventing reconciliation among rival factions. 
"The politicians have divided us and these athletes united us," said 
24-year-old Shiite Tareq Yassin, taking a break from dancing with hundreds of 
people in the streets of Amin, a southeastern Baghdad neighborhood. "I am 
usually very shy. Today, I forgot my shyness and everything else and I could 
only think of Iraq." 
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki tried to use the team's success to shore up 
support for his embattled government. 
During Sunday's final, state television reported that he would reward every 
player with a $10,000 bonus. Soon after the final whistle, the station reported 
that al-Maliki was congratulating team members on the telephone. But live 
coverage showed the entire squad celebrating on the pitch. 
Al-Maliki later issued a statement on the team's win in flowery Arabic. 
"There is a big difference between The Lions of the Two Rivers who struggle 
to put a smile on the faces of their people and those who work in dark corners 
strewing death and sorrow in the paths of innocent people. We are proud of you. 
You deserve all our love and respect," it said. 
President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, ordered an additional $10,000 reward for 
the players and twice that for Sunday's goal scorer Younis Mahmoud, a Sunni 
Arab, who scored on a pass from Mulla Mohammed, the team's only Kurdish player. 
Even Iraq's squabbling political factions set aside their disputes, if only 
temporarily. 
The largest Sunni Arab bloc said it would delay a planned response in its war 
of words with the Shiite-dominated government to avoid poisoning the joyous 
atmosphere. 
The Accordance Front has suspended its membership in al-Maliki's government 
and threatened to quit altogether this week if the prime minister does not meet 
certain demands. The government said the move amounted to blackmail and that the 
Sunni bloc had helped create some of the very policies it now criticized. 
Accordance Front spokesman Salim Abdullah said his group would issue a reply 
on Monday "because we don't want anything to spoil the day's joy for the people 
of Iraq." 
Its demands include a pardon for security detainees not charged with specific 
crimes, a firm commitment by the government to uphold human rights, the 
disbanding of militias and the inclusion of all parties as the government deals 
with Iraq's chaotic security environment. 
Most of the team's other players are Shiites, and Shiites back home had 
lightheartedly dubbed Sunday's game against the Sunni-dominated Saudis an "Ali 
vs Omar" encounter. That played on the belief among some Shiites that Omar Ibn 
al-Khatab, the second Muslim caliphate, usurped power from Ali Ibn Abi-Taleb, a 
cousin of the 7th century Prophet Muhammad and Shiism's most revered saint. 
But any links between the soccer game and Iraq's sectarian violence Sunday 
remained largely tenuous, with national pride, joy and hope the overwhelming 
sentiments. 
In northern Iraq, gunmen opened fire on shoppers in a Shiite Turkomen village 
near the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, killing seven people and wounding six, police 
said. 
Two U.S. soldiers also were killed -- one by small-arms fire north of Baghdad 
and another in fighting in an eastern section of the capital, the military said. 
In Najaf, the Shiite holy city south of Baghdad, 31-year-old teacher Mohammed 
Hussein said that Sunday's joy would be short-lived. 
"The Iraqi team has brought joy and victory," he said. "We are happy, but 
this will not last long because the politicians will bring us back to disputes 
and sadness tomorrow."