Baghdad - Iraqi leaders on Tuesday called for vigilance and
unity, as the country marked the planned withdrawal of US troops from
Iraqi cities and towns - and Kirkuk saw another attack leave 25 dead.
'Bless you. Bless you for your efforts to achieve this great
success,' Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki told the ministers of
defence, interior and national security and associated officers from
the security services, in remarks broadcast on state television.
The government has declared Tuesday, the deadline for US soldiers
to withdraw from urban areas in Iraq according to an Iraqi-US
agreement signed in 2008, National Sovereignty Day.
Huge crowds gathered in Baghdad's largest park on Monday night to
celebrate the withdrawal. Expatriate Iraqi singers Abid Falek, Salah
Hassan and Qasim Sultan returned to the capital to perform.
A military parade was scheduled to take place Tuesday in the
heavily fortified Green Zone to mark the occasion.
But the spectre of violence was never far from the celebrations.
As the day closed, a bomb struck the disputed northern city of Kirkuk
killing 25 people and wounding 18 - mostly Kurds.
The explosion took place in a chicken market in the heavily
Kurdish neighbourhood of al-Shorjah in the disputed city, witnesses
told the German Press Agency dpa.
In Mosul, Iraqi police shot dead an Iraqi citizen near a place
where people were celebrating the withdrawal, a security source told
dpa.
The source said that the man was 'armed and was provoking the
police force near the place of celebrations.' The source did not
elaborate.
A wave of lethal attacks has preceded the withdrawal. On Monday,
leading Sunni politician Jalil Matar was among nine people killed in
a spate of bombings across the country.
His murder followed the assassination two weeks ago of Harith al-
Obeidi, the leader of the Iraq's largest coalition of Sunni parties,
and came at the end a string of attacks that have left hundreds dead
in recent weeks.
'As we celebrate this day, we will not forget the bitterness of
the losses we have recently suffered because of the repeated,
desperate attempts by al-Qaeda and (Baathist) remnants to destabilize
the country and spread panic,' Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said in
a televised address.
'The loss of our loved ones in (recent bombings in) Bataha, Sadr
City and Taza has made us more determined to move forward, inspired
by the souls of the martyrs,' Talabani said.
Ezzat Ibrahim al-Duri, Saddam Hussein's former deputy and
purported leader of the Baathist insurgency likewise vowed to fight
on, in a statement run by al-Jazeera.
'we will continue to escalate the fighting until our country is
fully liberated,' al-Duri said, celebrating the US withdrawal from
Iraqi cities as ' a glorious, historic victory.'
'Terrorists have targeted Iraq, its unity and the unity of the
Iraqi people,' al-Maliki said Tuesday. 'They are trying to return
Iraq to sectarian violence with a terrorist attack here and there, by
targeting this sect or that. But we praise God that the age of
sectarianism is over.'
'For the sake of the martyrs and wounded, we must bind together as
a country to sustain the successes we've achieved,' al-Maliki told
the assembled security officials.
Iraqi security forces are engaged in their biggest deployment
since the US-led invasion of the country six years ago. An additional
120,000 Iraqi police and soldiers will deploy to Baghdad alone.
More than 130,000 US troops will remain in Iraq, and many of them
will continue to work in Iraqi units.
'After June 30, with US combat forces out of cities and villages,
localities, we will still be in Iraq,' US Ambassador to Iraq
Christopher Hill said.
Talabani thanked the US and other international soldiers for their
sacrifices.
'As we celebrate this day, we must express our thanks and
gratitude to our friends from the coalition forces who have borne a
great burden and dangers, and have suffered human and material losses
with us, first to rid Iraq of the worst totalitarian regime, then
during the joint work of restoring security and order to create an
atmosphere of stability and tranquility,' he said.
Al-Maliki and Talabani urged the Iraqi security services to use a
firm hand to keep the country safe.
'Some today talk about the detainees and their rights,' al-Maliki
said. 'We have not ignored those concerns. But we ask them why they
would ignore ... the innocent victims of terrorism.'
He asked the assembled officers and ministers 'to continue
performing their duties in accordance with the Constitution, law, and
human rights. Because today we stand together with all Iraq against
the murderers and criminals.'
'The determined efforts of our valiant armed forces are
commendable deserve our gratitude,' Talabani said. 'But security will
only be fully restored ... under the tent of national reconciliation
with the achievement of genuine national unity.
'(We must) strengthen al-Maliki's national unity government to
include all those who believe in the march of democracy and real
civic participation,' Talabani said.
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