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Last updated on February 13, 2012 at 14:19 EST

Iraqi Shi’ite, Sunni friendship meal ends in death

April 23, 2006

By Michael Georgy

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Just hours after Iraq’s prime
minister-designate promised to unite Iraqis on Saturday, three
Shi’ite brothers and two Sunni brothers went out to dinner
together.

It was an uplifting gathering in a country where sectarian
mistrust deepens after every bombing, shooting and kidnapping.

But the harsh reality of Iraq caught up with the group of
friends just after they paid the check and left the restaurant.

Gunmen in cars pulled up and shot them dead in plain view
of the public, police said. Relatives who washed the bodies for
burial said their eyes had been gouged out and hands bound.

Friendships were forgotten the next day as vows of revenge
whipped up an already emotional crowd at the funeral for the
Shi’ite brothers — Iyad, Ali and Mohammad Yazan.

There appeared to be no compassion for the Sunni Arab
brothers — Omar and Hakam Khudeir — even though they were
victims of the same hail of bullets.

Instead, memories of Saddam Hussein’s Sunni regime, which
oppressed Shi’ites, came back to haunt them as they mourned.

Rage then shifted to Sunni Wahhabis, Arab militants who
cross over into Iraq to blow themselves up in suicide missions
that have killed many thousands of Shi’ites.

There was no talk of the promised non-sectarian family of
Iraqis that Prime Minister-designate Jawad al-Maliki said he
would create after he was asked to form an administration.

“Since Saddam’s time each Shi’ite house loses four or five
people who are killed (by Sunnis),” said Karim Salim, whose
desire for revenge extended beyond Iraq’s Sunnis.

“The Shi’ites call for revenge. We call on the government
to open the borders so we can cross over and do what we need to
do with all Sunnis.”

Mourners carried the three Shi’ite brothers and a relative
who was with them at the restaurant in crude wooden coffins in
Baghdad’s Sadr City slum, named after a revered cleric believed
killed by Saddam’s agents in 1980.

Somewhere across Baghdad, the Sunni brothers were probably
in their own coffins surrounded by weeping and angry relatives
caught up in violence that has left hundreds of bodies on the
streets since the February bombing of a Shi’ite shrine.

No one knows why the gunmen killed the group of friends or
even if it was a sectarian slaying since both Sunnis and
Shi’ites died.

Maybe it was personal?

Those are questions often asked by grieving relatives in
Iraq.

But in a land many fear will slip inexorably toward a civil
war unless Maliki forms a government that can unite Iraqis,
their questions are rarely answered.


Source: reuters