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IRAQ: Desperate militants
using women for attacks, analyst says
February 3, 2008 - (IRIN) With joint US-Iraqi
military operations pushing extremists out of their strongholds
and limiting their activities, Iraqi militants are growing desperate
and have increasingly resorted to training women to become suicide
bombers, an analyst said on 2 February.
"The pressure on these militant groups forces them to come
up with other methods to penetrate stiffened security measures,
such as involving women in fighting, which is a religious taboo,"
said security analyst Hussein Sabah al-Dulaimi.
"Because of Muslim cultural sensitivities, women can be excellent
candidates for suicide attacks [in places] where there are no female
security guards," said al-Dulaimi, who is also a professor
of strategic studies at the University of Anbar.
"Most Iraqis are conservative Muslims who believe that physical
contact is forbidden between women and men who are not related by
blood or marriage. As a result, women are often allowed to pass
through male-guarded checkpoints without being searched," he
added.
Disabled women used
The latest attack involving women happened on 1 February when at
least 99 civilians were killed and up to 200 wounded in separate
suicide bombings in two pet markets in Baghdad.
Iraqi officials, who requested anonymity as they were not authorised
to speak to the press, said the suicide bombers were two mentally
disabled women with Down Syndrome. They had been wearing belts carrying
15 kilograms of explosives, which were detonated by remote control
- leading to speculation that the women may have been unwitting
accomplices to the tragic attacks.
"This behaviour can be only seen as an act of desperation.
It can be explained by the difficulty of bringing would-be male
suicide bombers into action," al-Dulaimi said.
Growing number of female bombers
According to the Iraqi Ministry of Interior, at least 17 female
suicide bombers have blown themselves up since the US-led invasion
of Iraq in March 2003.
Their targets have been US and Iraqi security forces, tribal Sunni
groups battling al-Qaida in Iraq and Shia pilgrims, interior ministry
statistics indicate. Among them was a Belgian Muslim who detonated
explosives near a US patrol in November 2005. She was the only one
killed in the blast.
Suicide bombings are "against Islam"
Muslim and tribal leaders in Iraq have been stepping up efforts
to denounce the strategy of using suicide bombers, whether male
or female, as inhuman and un-Islamic.
Sheikh Luqman Abdul-Hadi of al-Furqan mosque in western Baghdad
denounced suicide bombers saying their acts were "against Islam's
instructions and will take the perpetrator and the one who planned
it to hell".
"Killing civilians and even animals or plants in such gruesome
attacks is not jihad [holy war] and will not lead the bomber to
paradise as they think but instead to hell," Abdul-Hadi said.
Ibtissam Jamal Dawood, an Iraqi independent women's activist, has
called for intensive psycho-social programmes to protect desperate
women from extremists.
"Desperate women, especially those who have lost their loved
ones in attacks, should have priority in all government-sponsored
social programmes otherwise they will be simple prey to the extremists,"
Ibtissam said.
"Anyone can play with the minds of desperate women and manipulate
them or exploit them as in most cases they feel that they have nothing
to live for after losing a loved one," she added.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76545
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