www.csua.org/u/jsc -> uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20071022/tpl-uk-iraq-43a8d4f_1.html
Reuters By Aseel Kami Reuters - Monday, October 22 04:45 pm BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Violence in Iraq has dropped by 70 percent since the end of June, when US forces completed their build-up of 30,000 extra troops to stabilise the war-torn country, the Interior Ministry said on Monday. Washington began sending reinforcements to Iraq in February to try to buy Iraq's feuding political leaders time to reach a political accommodation to end violence between majority Shi'ites and minority Sunni Arabs that has killed tens of thousands and forced millions from their homes. While the leaders have failed to agree on key laws aimed at reconciling the country's warring sects, the troop buildup has succeeded in quelling the violence.
al Qaeda, other Sunni Arab militants and Shi'ite militias in the Baghdad beltway. Interior Ministry spokesman Major-General Abdul-Karim Khalaf told reporters there had been a 70 percent reduction in violence countrywide in the three months from July to September from the previous quarter. GRADUAL IMPROVEMENT In Baghdad, considered the epicentre of the violence because of its mix of Shi'ites and Sunni Arabs, car bombs had decreased by 67 percent and roadside bombs by 40 percent, he said. There had been a 28 percent drop in the number of bodies found dumped in the capital's streets. In Anbar, a former insurgent hotbed where Sunni Arab tribes have joined US forces against al Qaeda, there has been an 82 percent drop in violent deaths. "These figures show a gradual improvement in controlling the security situation," Khalaf said. But in the northern province of Nineveh, where many al Qaeda and other Sunni Arab militants fled to escape the crackdown in Baghdad and surrounding region, there had been a 129 percent rise in car bombings and a corresponding 114 percent increase in the number of people killed in violence. Data from the health, interior and defence ministries in September showed a 50 percent drop in civilian deaths across the country from August, when 1,773 fatalities were recorded. While the figures confirm US data showing a positive trend in combating al Qaeda bombers, there is growing instability in southern Iraq, where rival Shi'ite factions are fighting for political dominance. Police said six gunmen were killed in police raids in Kerbala, 110 km (70 miles) southwest of Baghdad. Some 50 people were killed in Kerbala in August in fierce clashes between fighters loyal to Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and local police, who are seen as aligned to the rival Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council's armed wing, the Badr Organisation. After the clashes, Sadr said he was imposing a six-month freeze on the activities of the Mehdi Army, increasingly seen as beyond his control, so that he could reorganise it. In Baghdad, three roadside bombs killed four people, three of them policemen, while in Mosul one policeman was killed when a blast hit a police patrol.
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