Iraq's government on Saturday agreed a truce with the movement of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr to halt weeks of fighting in eastern Baghdad between Shia militia and security forces, officials said. The truce could end violence that has killed several hundred people, trapped the 2 million residents of Sadr City in a battle zone and prompted aid workers to warn of a humanitarian crisis.
But it is unclear how much control the anti-American Sadr has over many of the militiamen who claim allegiance to him in Sadr City, stronghold of his Mehdi Army militia. "Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has approved this agreement," government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said. "The Iraqi government calls on all parties to commit to this deal, to be calm and show self-restraint."
The US military declined to make any immediate comment. Dabbagh said the agreement called for militiamen to hand in their medium and heavy weapons. He did not elaborate but this would include rocket and mortar launchers, which have been used to fire hundreds of shells at the Green Zone government and diplomatic compound since Maliki ordered a crackdown on militias in late March. Sadr spokesman Salah al-Ubaidi told Reuters the deal had been made through the Sadr movement's bloc in parliament and the ruling Shi'ite alliance.
He said he expected the pact to take effect either on Saturday night or Sunday with a total halt to all Iraqi military activity for four days. But much will depend on the militiamen who have been roaming the teeming streets of Sadr City. US helicopters have been hovering over Sadr City 24 hours a day, hunting rocket and mortar crews. It was unclear if Maliki had ordered the US military to stop offensive operations.
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