More

Iraqi Interpreter For U.S. Army Shot Dead By Own Family Over His Job

First Posted: 06/18/10 03:23 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:50 PM ET

Us Troop

BAGHDAD (AP) -- 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.

The attack occurred as at least 16 people were killed nationwide, a grim reminder of the dangers facing Iraqis despite a sharp drop in violence over the past few years.

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.

Car bombs, meanwhile, tore through two neighborhoods in restive cities north of Baghdad in separate attacks targeting a police captain and a provincial council member.

The deadliest attack was in the northern city of Tuz Khormato when an explosives-laden car blew up about 50 yards (meters) from the house of Niazi Mohammed, a Turkomen member of the Salahuddin provincial council, according to police.

City police chief Col. Hussein Ali said at least seven people were killed and more than 60 wounded in the blast, which left some 20 houses heavily damaged. A second car bomb was discovered about 100 yards (meters) from the blast site, but it did not explode, Ali said.

"We believe that al-Qaida was behind today's attack in order to destabilize security and re-ignite sectarian strife," he said.

Mohammed, who was not home at the time of the blast, condemned the attack, saying it only hurt innocent civilians.

"My job in the provincial council is to serve people and it has nothing to do with security forces," he said.

Another blast targeted the house of police Capt. Mustafa Mohammed in Baqouba northeast of Baghdad, killing two neighbors and wounding 27 other people, including some of the officer's relatives, police said.

The officials reported the violence on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information to the media.

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," said Mohammed Khudair, an investigator with the Abu Ghraib police department. Sahwa, or Awakening Councils, are government-backed Sunni militias that first revolted against al-Qaida in Iraq in late 2006 with U.S. backing.

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 since, 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 cleanup 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.

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.

Car bombs, meanwhile, tore through two neighborhoods in restive cities north of Baghdad in separate attacks targeting a police captain and a provincial council member.

The deadliest attack was in the northern city of Tuz Khormato when an explosives-laden car blew up about 50 yards (meters) from the house of Niazi Mohammed, a Turkomen member of the Salahuddin provincial council, according to police.

City police chief Col. Hussein Ali said at least seven people were killed and more than 60 wounded in the blast, which left some 20 houses heavily damaged. A second car bomb was discovered about 100 yards (meters) from the blast site, but it did not explode, Ali said.

"We believe that al-Qaida was behind today's attack in order to destabilize security and re-ignite sectarian strife," he said.

Mohammed, who was not home at the time of the blast, condemned the attack, saying it only hurt innocent civilians.

"My job in the provincial council is to serve people and it has nothing to do with security forces," he said.

Another blast targeted the house of police Capt. Mustafa Mohammed in Baqouba northeast of Baghdad, killing two neighbors and wounding 27 other people, including some of the officer's relatives, police said.

The officials reported the violence on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information to the media.

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," said Mohammed Khudair, an investigator with the Abu Ghraib police department. Sahwa, or Awakening Councils, are government-backed Sunni militias that first revolted against al-Qaida in Iraq in late 2006 with U.S. backing.

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 since, 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 cleanup 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.

___

Associated Press Writer Bushra Juhi contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST WORLD

BAGHDAD (AP) -- 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. ...
BAGHDAD (AP) -- 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. ...
Filed by Curtis M. Wong  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 655
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (10 total)
photo
JoeBlough
The Horror. . .The Horror. . .
11:22 AM on 06/21/2010
Republican Family Values?
10:10 PM on 06/20/2010
This is what typically happens to collaborators in all societies.
07:21 PM on 06/20/2010
can you smell the propaganda?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paula Ann
06:06 PM on 06/20/2010
wasn't benedic arnold executed?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StarDagger
The Welfare of the People is the Supreme Law
04:34 PM on 06/20/2010
Patricide, he will be cursed by the Gods for all his lives!

Guess they do not read Oedipus in Iraq!

.-

-.
photo
EagleFliesInSky
Artist at work.
01:45 PM on 06/20/2010
Sheesh. Happy Father's Day.

Tragedy.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:32 PM on 06/20/2010
We were supposed to be out of Iraq about a month ago, according to Obama's campaign "promise."

Close to being "as guilty as Bush" a mere two years in....what will he accomplish in two more years?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StarDagger
The Welfare of the People is the Supreme Law
04:36 PM on 06/20/2010
I was looking for a "the" to say that that was the only part of your post that made sense. But you didn't even have one of those. Total fail.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:16 PM on 06/20/2010
the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the

xoxoxoxo

(Try reading it again.)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
11:06 AM on 06/20/2010
"Winning the hearts and minds of the Afghani people?"
This War to protect the Opium Poppy fields and drive the greed of the FED and the Industrial, Military, Congressional complex that Ike warned us of 50 years ago is in full fruition here thanks to George W Bush and the Dick Cheney Wrecking Crew and Torturers.
End the Wars.
Afghanistan; the Graveyard of Empires.
Daddy Bush built the Al Qeada and Dubya continues to feed them through this war that Obama inherited and the Generals on the ground are not doing their job.
08:12 AM on 06/20/2010
THESE are the people WE are spilling our blood and money for!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paula Ann
11:18 AM on 06/20/2010
american blood and american tax dollars are being pi$$ed away to protect oil company interests
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GCitizen
Global Citizen
12:14 PM on 06/20/2010
They are the people You are spilling their blood, occupy their country, kill tens of thousands of them, humiliate the others, for the sake of the Jews lobbies in Washington, the Neocons, and the oil and military corporations.
06:46 AM on 06/20/2010
The situation in Iraq remains much the same as it has been for the past several thousand years and only the most illinformed and navie could believe that the American intervention will change Iraq. For a picture of the Iraq congress in the form of an editorial cartoon go to http://www,saintpeterii.com
01:02 AM on 06/20/2010
Anyone working for the occupying army in lraq is a trait0r, and trait0rs get executed.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:24 PM on 06/19/2010
wonder if it would even be a crime, if he had killed his mother or sister for an act he felt was dishonorable on the family.
photo
LogicalMathMan
Math, Finance, English, Business Instructor
09:59 PM on 06/19/2010
In Iraq, it is for the oil. In Afghanistan, we find out, it is for the minerals. Now, it makes sense why the Soviets and the US (ummmm UN, yeah right?) have been embroiled in an 8 year war with an impoverished nation.

The UN says IEDs in Afghanistan are impeding progress. Duhhhhhhh? Invaders face that kind of opposition. If JP Morgan believes that a Green Zone will be created around the mines to protect their excavation and profit ambitions, then let their executives suffer the consequences. Meanwhile, China's diplomatic ties with Afghanistan already has 'dibs' on their mining.

Just bring our kids home!
photo
david5000
Detective & Pilot
11:31 PM on 06/19/2010
Not any mineral, it's lithium for all the crazy baggers as their numbers are increasing by the day.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:35 PM on 06/20/2010
More likely, it'll be for our soldiers, who will come home, eventually, with massive mental problems and they'll need to be zombified.
01:58 AM on 06/20/2010
If you think that the costs of fighting two wars can be recovered by oil and lithium, think again. Wars costs far too much to be explained so simply as a desire to secure resources. If the U.S. was really only interested in oil and lithium, the U.S. would have negotiated bi-lateral trade agreements with Iraq and Afghanistan, not attacked and occupied the two countries.

We do not live on Jame Cameron's Pandora.
07:41 PM on 06/19/2010
C"mon huffpo commenters. Dont dissappoint me. Cant find anyone here who blames Israel for this killing. I am sure that if you try hard enough you can even succeed in that....
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:39 PM on 06/19/2010
Feeling unloved?
photo
david5000
Detective & Pilot
11:33 PM on 06/19/2010
WE can't even mention I----L, the post will be deleted instantly, so we don't bother.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paula Ann
12:38 AM on 06/20/2010
tru dat
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
06:24 PM on 06/19/2010
Time to leave Iraq
Obama will lie about the drawdown and keep it going...

Phosphorus burns humans.
http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/19.html
photo
waltzacrosstexas
When in doubt... just ask "HER" to dance!
08:06 PM on 06/19/2010
I spoke with with my son whom is in Iraq (for the 2nd time!) the other day... the "drawdown is actually happening. And with the exception of a few bases, we are getting out of Iraq. While my son is not allowed to go into detail... he did have this to say, for those whom would be interested and able to assist.
Because of this "drawdown", some of the essential "supplies" are becoming disrupted and/or scarce. These would include such thing as: Deoderant, toothbrushes and toothpaste, shampoo and liquid bodywash, etc. Also, air freshener, foot powder, and thing of this sort. These supplies can be sent through the U.S.P.S., addressed to "ANY SOLDIER"... OPERATION IRAQUI FREEDOM forces, Iraq.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:41 PM on 06/19/2010
Arent these available at the PX/BX?
photo
EagleFliesInSky
Artist at work.
01:43 PM on 06/20/2010
It's WHO, not whom.