Over the last week and despite warnings that it was
too dangerous, 47-year-old Hussein Majeed Marioush had been hanging
campaign posters in the volatile mixed-sect district of Zafaraniya,
about 20 miles south of
By late Monday, no clear motive had emerged in the
killings. Iraqi authorities offered scenarios including a robbery, a
financial dispute and sectarian violence. Qanbar and Marioush's family,
however, believe that the slayings were retaliation for his campaign
work with the
"This is a completely political message," Qanbar said. "There's no family feud, no robbery, no case of someone hating someone so much that they kill a whole family with six children. This is political."
Qanbar provided
Local news channels initially reported the deaths as beheadings, while other news agencies reported "some" beheadings among the dead. Security officials from various agencies gave statements that differed slightly from the family's version as to the manner of and possible motive for the killings, but no one disputed that a particularly savage attack had claimed an entire family. Four suspects were in custody late Monday, police said.
"This is a very clear message," said
Qanbar said Marioush had signed up to distribute posters for his campaign after an introduction through Karim, who had attended high school with Qanbar. At a campaign meeting last week, Qanbar said, Marioush had seemed determined to hang posters in his neighborhood of Wahda even though others tried to dissuade him. Marioush and his family were Shiites and parts of his district are known for Sunni Muslim insurgent activity, including sectarian attacks on Shiites.
"He said, 'No, there's a Shiite area that's safe and a Sunni area that's bad, and I'll only hang them on the Shiite side.' He told us he could do it without anyone knowing," Qanbar said. "He took posters and other campaign stuff, and I got a call the next day that he was doing a great job."
Karim said his cousin worked as a taxi driver and described him as a "peaceful" family man who had gotten involved in politics only recently and had received no previous threats. He said a mass burial was scheduled for Tuesday.
"We will raise banners demanding that the government find and execute the killers in the same place where they committed this crime," Karim said.
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(c) 2010, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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