Moqtada Sadr, the radical Iraqi Shia cleric, has appeared in public in
He led Friday prayers in Kufa to deliver a defiant sermon condemning the
A senior aide to Mr Sadr told the BBC that he had left
Meanwhile, British sources say the leader of the cleric's Mehdi Army in
However, a source close to the Mehdi militia in the city accused the British Army of carrying out the killing - this is also how Arab news channels are reporting the death.
Abu Qadir, also know as Wissam Waili, 23, was wanted for weapons trafficking, theft, financing illegal militias and carrying out attacks on British forces, the British Army says.
A spokesman said Iraqi forces had tried to arrest him and that the militia leader had died in an exchange of fire. He denied British troops were involved.
'Serious resistance'
Moqtada Sadr, in a characteristically fiery anti-American sermon delivered in Kufa, demanded that US forces leave
He led the 6,000 worshippers in the mosque in chanting: "No, no for Satan. No, no for
However, the cleric urged his followers to use peaceful means of opposition.
His Mehdi Army, a Shia militia responsible for some of the sectarian killings in
During his absence, Mr Sadr withdrew six ministers loyal to him from the Iraqi cabinet in an effort to press Prime Minister Nouri Maliki to set a timetable for a
In 2004, the Mehdi army fought two serious fighters against US forces but when the
The cleric's brand of nationalism and populism has made him a popular figure among
In a BBC interview, the chairman of Mr Sadr's political committee confirmed the young cleric had left
He said Mr Sadr had a political agenda - as yet undeclared - which included "correcting the path of the current government".
He said political pressure needed to be applied to the occupation forces "in order to give this government more security responsibilities and more control over the country".
'Next months vital'
Moqtada Sadr is one of the most important players in
One theory for his return is a desire to reassert control over his militia, which is reported to be increasingly fragmented.
Mr Sadr may also see a chance to strengthen his position in the absence of his great Shia rival Abdul Aziz Hakim, who has left
One senior
If he calls his militia back onto the streets of
Gen Peter Pace, the chairman of the
On Thursday, President Bush said the next few months would be vital to the new
He said the last of the 30,000
The death toll for American soldiers in
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Moqtada Sadr