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The Shiites have a huge ability of mobilization and are distributed at many governorates regardless of population density
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BAGHDAD,
January 29 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Fresh statistics by
an international organization suggested that Iraq's Sunnis are in a
clear majority, as Shiite scholars conceded that Shiites could make up
as much as 40 percent of the whole population.
The
statistics, released by a reliable international humanitarian relief
agency in 2003, suggested that Sunnis make up 58 percent of the Iraqi
population and Shiites 40 percent.
'The
Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq' put the whole population at about 27
million, including 16 million Sunnis and 11 million Shiites, Quds Press
International news agency reported on Wednesday, January 28.
The
remainder, 2 percent, include Christians and Jews.
The
group depended on statistics by the former ministries of trade and
planning as well as the data provided by the self-rule government in
Kurdistan.
It
also depended on ration cards every Iraqi family have used to get food
supplies under the more than 12 years' sanctions after the Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait in 1990.
The
cards have been used by Iraqis as identity cards, and analysts say they
could closely estimate the number of the population regardless of the
fact that some Iraqis, Sunnis and Shiites, may give wrong counts of
their children to get more food.
The
international relief group had found in statistics released in 1997 that
Sunnis outnumber Shiites by more than 819,000 people.
Other
statistics, collected with dependence on counts of the Central
Statistics Office of the former Iraqi Health Ministry and a study by an
Iraqi academician, believed that the numerical gap is much lesser, with
Sunnis estimated at 53 percent and Shiites at 47 percent.
Belying
Previous Statistics
The
latest statistics came to belie earlier studies showing that Shiites are
a majority in the already sectarian-turbulent country.
Unofficial
Shiite statistics, now hyped as the most closer to truth, said Shiites
make up 60-65 percent of the population. Others went as far to put
the percentage at 73 percent.
Moving
to the other extreme, Sunni statistics said that Sunnis are larger in
number forming 65 percent against 40 percent of Shiites.
Iraqi
academicians – both Sunnis and Shiites - threw suspicions on both
counts.
These
numbers are exaggerated as "the number of Shiites, I think, is
averaged at 40 or 45 percent of the whole population against 53 percent
of Sunnis," the Shiite Mohamed Jawwad Ali told Quds Press news
agency.
Mazen
El-Ramadani, a Sunni political science professor, attributed the
numerical conflicts between two main sects to the Shiites' huge ability
of mobilization and their distribution at many governorates regardless
of population density.
El-Ramadani
said the Shiite majority claims were first propagated by Jewish writer
Hanna Batto.
Politically
Motivated
Observers
said the contrasted Shiite and Sunnis statistics could have been
politically motivated, as the U.S. occupation forces seeking to
marginalize the role of Sunnis – now launching almost-daily resistance
attacks that killed hundreds of American soldiers.
Iraqis
Sunnis have
expressed bitter resentment at being marginalized under the new
U.S.-led order in post-violence Iraq, charging that the Americans were
rewarding the Kurds and the Shiites with drawing up the country's
political landscape.
For
the first time since modern day Iraq was founded in 1921, the Sunnis are
no longer in charge of Iraq with the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
The
Sunnis have only five seats against 13 Shiites on the 25-member Interim
Governing Council (IGC), whose members were selected by the U.S.
occupation forces.
Sunni
leaders also showed fury over reports that the country's Kurds clamor
for a federalist state and Shiites poise to rule Iraq after years of
oppression under captured former President Saddam Hussein.
But
they warned against schemes aimed at pitting the Sunnis and Shiites
against each other, unleashing a deadly communal war.
A
bomb attack hit a Sunni mosque in Baghdad in September 2003 that
left three dead, blaming Shiite groups from abroad for
"provocations against the Sunnis".
A
few days before the attack, a massive car bomb killed
top Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohamed Baqer Al-Hakim and 82 others after
Friday noon prayers in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, sparking fears
that Iraq's ongoing violence could take a sectarian turn.
Reports
also said that Shiites seized 18 Sunni mosques, including 12 in Baghdad
and the only two in the Shiite majority cities of Najaf and Karbala.
The
Iraqi Governing Council had decided to cancel the post of the minister
of (Waqf) endowment and religious affairs in the new
cabinet declared the same month after Sunni leaders protested the
efficiency of the Shiite candidate for the post.