SADR CITY, Iraq, Sept. 26, 2006

Baghdad's Secure Shiite Slum

Mehdi Army Fills Social Services Gap In Sadr, But U.S. Says It Must Disarm

  • Play CBS Video Video A Shiite Sanctuary

    As violence rages across Baghdad, there is one neighborhood where security is good even though U.S. troops are rarely seen. Chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan reports from Sadr City.

  • Video First Look: Lara Logan In Iraq

    Only On The Web: Katie Couric discusses stories on tonight's "CBS Evening News"; and Lara Logan tells of visiting Sadr City, a Baghdad area off-limits to U.S. forces.

  • Video Mehdi Soldier Speaks Out

    Only on the Web: National correspondent Lara Logan speaks with an anonymous Mehdi army soldier about his thoughts on the situation in Iraq.

    • Lara Logan talks to a member of the Mehdi army.

      Lara Logan talks to a member of the Mehdi army.  (CBS)

    • Iraqi civilians inspect the site of a bomb explosion in Baghdad's Sadr City, Sept. 23, 2006.

      Iraqi civilians inspect the site of a bomb explosion in Baghdad's Sadr City, Sept. 23, 2006.  (AFP/Getty Images)

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(CBS)  Late into the night, Sadr City is still bustling with life. There's no sign of the curfew that shuts down the rest of Baghdad in the early evening, CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan reports.

The shops and the market are open, and everybody can go and come back to their homes safely.

The vast Shiite slum of 3 million, which from time to time experiences big bombing attacks like one that killed dozens of people last Saturday, is still one of the most secure areas in a city ravaged by violence.

It's not because of Iraq's police or the U.S. Army; it's because of the local men, with weapons out of sight, who enforce order on every street. They are the Mehdi army, a militia founded by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, a man who has twice sent gunmen into battle against the United States.

To Sadr City's Shiites, the Mehdi army are their protectors. But to Iraq's Sunni minority, they are the executioners behind most of the sectarian killings dividing Iraq.

A young Mehdi army fighter tells CBS News that the Mehdi army is doing everything in Sadr City that the Iraqi government is not doing. The Mehdi army is responsible for security, for justice and for social services, he says. In that way, the army is operating much like Lebanon's Hezbollah.

Moqtada al-Sadr's local government was in action at a social services office, where officials were handing out supplies to people in need. There were three women outside the office, all desperate and penniless. They said they had nowhere else to go.

"Moqtada is very good with us," one woman says. "Everything comes from him."

The more powerful al-Sadr becomes, the more of a problem he is for the United States. He’s part of the most powerful faction in the Iraqi parliament and now controls four ministries, including health.

In fact, U.S. officials say Iraq's entire health care system has been hijacked by Sadr's Mehdi army militia. Mehdi gunmen now guard hospitals across Baghdad and it's Sadr — not the government — who gets the credit for all medical services provided.

"We thank al-Sadr’s department because they help these people," Dr. Haider says. "They do everything for them."

The U.S. military has been reluctant to tackle Sadr and his militia head on because of the power he wields both in government and on the street.

But U.S. and Iraqi leaders agree sectarian death squads are now the No. 1 threat to Iraq, and all militias, including the Mehdi army, have to be disarmed.

One Mehdi Army fighter said that if the Iraqi government were to say they have to give in their weapons, they would talk with the government. But the fighter says it would "never happen" that the government would say there could be no more militias.

If he's right, it may be impossible to stop this increasingly divided country from splitting along sectarian lines.



©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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by gladetryst September 27, 2006 2:24 PM EDT
He is obviously popular with the people, he is obviously keeping the crime rate down, there is nothing wrong with a militia per se. Our -constitution- guarantees that we can create militia to protect against our government being overbearing. Maybe its a good idea that they create a society as they see fit. They -are- tribal, so let them figure it out, not our problem.
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by mjv2944 September 27, 2006 10:15 AM EDT
You no what folks, its time to let the best terrorist win. It is a waste of our young men and women to try and bring democracy to this country. They've never had it and I don't think that they really want it. They are a tribal people and I don't think it will change for many years to come. This Zareen2 is why I think its time to leave. They cannot think for themselves. Thats why the leaders convince the young people to strap a bomb to their *** or load their car and set it off. I wonder why this Moqtada character hasn't blown him self up in the name of Allah, its because he likes living. They'll be fighting a sectarian war 10,000 years from now, what is the past is also the future.
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by reuben110-2009 September 27, 2006 6:56 AM EDT
Everybody knows mossad and the more secluded Amerian factions are causing sectarian rivalry, because they want to divide the country, they do not want a big oil rich state, where people like al-sadr are highly regarded, God forbid, he became the PM, oh dear.oh dear.
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