Rifts Emerge in Iraq's Shiite Community
By HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press Writer
KUFA, Iraq - The political empowerment of Iraq's Shiite Muslims after decades on the sidelines is producing grave internal rifts, with rival factions and religious leaders competing for advantage before Iraqi sovereignty is restored on July 1.
With so much at stake, the line between politics and religion has blurred. Shows of force are common, and mudslinging is on the rise.
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Cracks in the Shiite community are most visible in the holy city of Najaf and the nearby town of Kufa.
Many of the 5,000 followers who prayed behind al-Sadr on Friday were black-clad young men wearing badges that bore his image. They waved banners and repeatedly broke into chants to give the usually somber ritual the atmosphere of a political rally.
In Najaf, portraits of al-Sadr and his late father compete for space on walls, shop windows, power poles, taxis and buses with images of al-Hakim and his late brother and, to a much lesser extent, al-Sistani.
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Al-Sadr's supporters also laid siege to al-Sistani's home at Najaf in April, demanding that he leave the country. Tribesmen loyal to the older cleric forced them to abandon the siege. Al-Sistani has not left his home since.
The siege followed the stabbing death in Najaf on April 10 of moderate cleric Abdel-Maguid al-Khoei. Yitzhak Nakash — a leading authority on Iraq's Shiites — said al-Khoei "exemplified the sober and moderate face of Iraqi Shiism" and his death signaled an "ominous turn" in the power struggle within the sect.
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