Police say Iraqi interpreter for US military gunned down by family members north of Baghdad

By Bushra Juhi, AP
Friday, June 18, 2010

Police say Iraqi interpreter for US army killed

BAGHDAD — An Iraqi interpreter for the U.S. military was gunned down on Friday by his son and nephew north of the capital after he refused their demands to quit his job, a police official said.

Hameed al-Daraji was shot in the chest in his house in Samarra, 60 miles (95 kilometers) north of Baghdad, police Lt. Emad Muhsin said.

Muhsin said al-Daraji worked as a contractor and translator for the U.S. military since 2003 against the wishes of his family. His relatives were constantly fighting with al-Daraji to give up working with the Americans, but he ignored their pleas, he added.

Al-Daraji’s son and nephew were arrested after the attack and confessed to being members of an al-Qaida group that sanctioned the killing, Muhsin said, adding that police were searching for a second son suspected of being an accomplice.

Iraqis working for the U.S. military in the country have been targets of extremist groups who view them as traitors and collaborators with an invading country. But it is rare for family members to kill a relative because of his or her employment with the Americans in Iraq.

Elsewhere in Iraq, gunmen killed an employee of a local irrigation department and three of his family members Friday as part of an apparent tribal dispute over water distribution west of Baghdad, officials said.

The attack came a day after an anti-al-Qaida fighter and members of his immediate family were killed in another village, but police said the man killed Friday had no ties to the terror network or Iraqi security forces, who are also frequently targeted by insurgents in Iraq.

Faisal Hassan, the 40-year-old driver of a drilling truck, his wife and two young children were slain as they slept in a pre-dawn attack in the mainly Sunni district of Abu Ghraib, police said.

The grisly slayings reflect concerns that criminal activity is rising as sectarian bloodshed ebbs.

Irrigation department employees have increasingly been targeted in the area as rival tribal factions battle over the distribution of water. Another employee and the son of the department’s director also were killed earlier this year, police said.

“Because of the frequent attacks on these employees, their job has become as risky as working with the police or Sahwa,” Mohammed Khudair, an investigator with the Abu Ghraib police department, said. Sahwa, or Awakening Councils, are government-backed Sunni militias that first revolted against al-Qaida in Iraq in late 2006 with U.S. backing.

Thursday’s attack occurred in nearby Anbar province, a former insurgent stronghold that was the birthplace of the Awakening Council movement.

Gunmen killed Khudr al-Issawi, his wife and three children as they slept in the garden to escape the heat in a village near Fallujah, 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad.

Such attacks in which entire families were gunned down were common at the height of Shiite-Sunni bloodshed that pushed the country to the brink of civil war in 2006-2007. Violence has dropped sharply, but attacks continue, raising concerns about the readiness of the Iraqis to protect the people as the U.S. military prepares to withdraw its forces by the end of next year.

Also Friday, two rockets slammed into a group of houses near the Baghdad International Airport, killing two people and wounding eight, police said.

A bomb struck an oil pipeline near Beiji, 155 miles (250 kilometers) north of Baghdad, filling the sky with thick, black smoke as clean-up crews burned the oil that was leaking into the nearby Tigris River, officials said.

Abdul-Aziz Muslih, an official at the Beiji refinery, said the pipeline links oil fields in Kirkuk with Beiji. The Iraqi army had sealed off the site while firefighters battled to put out the blaze.

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Associated Press Writer Sameer N. Yacoub contributed to this report.

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