By Luke Baker BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The U.S. military raided a Sunni mosque in western Baghdad and said it had seized arms and explosives in an operation that sparked an angry Muslim protest after Friday prayers. More than 1,000 worshippers at the al-Tabool mosque denounced Thursday's raid in an emotional demonstration and accused U.S. troops of trampling on the Koran, or Muslim holy book. "American soldiers entered the mosque with their shoes on and with machine guns in their hands," the imam, Abdulsatar al-Janabi, told Reuters, adding the raid had lasted five hours. "They trampled on the holy Koran, beat up some of the worshippers and stole computers and a donations box," he said. Others claimed that a page was torn from the Koran. Protesters screamed and cried, chanting: "God is great" and "America is the enemy of God." Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, a U.S. military spokesman, said U.S. troops had conducted the operation after a tip off from Iraqis and netted a wide array of weaponry to be used against occupying forces facing a relentless insurgency. "Over recent months, the U.S. 1st Armored Division has received numerous reports from Iraqis that the al-Tabool mosque was being used for criminal and terrorist activities," Kimmitt told a news conference Friday. "U.S. forces, led by the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps and the Iraqi police therefore conducted a cordon and search." He said troops had found several sticks of high explosives, hand grenades, AK-47 rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and thousands of rounds of ammunition. "There is clear evidence from what we seized that this mosque was being used for things other than free religious expression," Kimmitt said. He said 32 people had been detained, including several believed to be foreigners, and dismissed suggestions that U.S. forces might have defiled the mosque. "We are aware of the allegation that coalition forces tore pages from the Koran... But I can assure you that the greatest possible care was taken to respect the sanctity of the mosque," he said. Al-Janabi, the imam, denied the raid had netted much weaponry. "In every mosque in Iraq (news - web sites) we keep light guns for self protection," he said. "They claim it's an arsenal of weapons, but it's just for self protection." He said the raid showed U.S. forces were persecuting Sunni Muslims, who were favored under ousted President Saddam Hussein (news - web sites), and warned there would be repercussions. "The army of Sunnis will come back again," he said.
|
Muslims in America |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Source: "The Mosque in America: A National Portrait," a study conducted by the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Hartford Institute for Religion Research (April 26, 2001) |
Then . .
Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, a U.S. military spokesman, said U.S. troops had conducted the operation after a tip off from Iraqis and netted a wide array of weaponry to be used against occupying forces facing a relentless insurgency.
Of the 7 million Muslims in the United States, and out of the 1,209 mosques located in this country, what percentage of them share the same sentiments of their Muslim brothers in Iraq?