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To: Ernest_at_the_Beach

47 killed, dozens wounded in Iraq violence
(DPA)

28 January 2007

BAGHDAD - Ongoing violence in and around Baghdad claimed at least 47 more Iraqi lives on Sunday despite beefed-up security and police raids.


In Kirkuk, 250 kilometres north of Baghdad, a car bomb killed eight Iraqis and wounded 15 others in a district dominated by Shias and Kurds. The bomb was detonated in a busy car market.

Adel Abdel-Mohsen, adviser to the Minister of Industry, was shot down by armed militants in Yarmouk district, western Baghdad. His two daughters and three others were also killed.

Earlier, in the same area, an adviser for the Agriculture Ministry was also killed, reported the Al Iraqia state channel.

The official was accompanying four other Iraqis in a vehicle when they were shot at by armed militants. The official - whose name has not been disclosed - and his escorts died instantly.

Another Iraqi was killed, and seven more wounded, when an explosive device blew up inside a mini-bus in the east of the capital.

Near the Al Nedaa Sunni mosque in northern Baghdad, one person was killed and nine others were wounded when an explosive-laden car, parked on the roadside, blew up. The street was busy with labourers looking for day jobs.

Separately, eyewitnesses told Deutsche Presse-Agentur DPA that mortar shells had fallen on a school in western Baghdad killing five female students and wounding 20 others.

In Shia-dominated Sadr city in eastern Baghdad, a vehicle exploded, killing at least four people and wounding 32 others.

Meanwhile, armed clashes erupted between Iraqi security forces and ‘terrorist’ group Najaf, 180 kilometres south of Baghdad.

Najaf and neighbouring city Karbala, where more than 25,000 policemen and soldiers were deployed last Tuesday, are currently swarming with Muslim pilgrims who are celebrating the Shia Ashura festival.

In the Zarka area of Kufa, near Najaf, militants belonging to Jund Allah (Soldiers of God) and Iraqi policemen clashed. US military helicopters reportedly provided aid during the raid.

Najaf governor Assad Abu-Kalal told the press that at least 14 militants were killed so far and five Afghani militants were detained during the ongoing clashes.

The governor confirmed that US military helicopters provided cover for the security forces. However, he did not confirm reports of a US helicopter accident, saying only that ‘a foreign object’ had crashed into a nearby river.

The governor refused any further comments.

In Soueira, 45 kilometres south of Baghdad, armed clashes between joint Iraqi army and security forces from one side and militants from another were also reported.

The clashes occurred after the forces cordoned off the village and started house-by-house raids toeing terror suspects.

According to a credible police source, who chose to remain anonymous, at least three Iraqi servicemen were killed and four others wounded. A militant was also accidentally injured.

The village housing the Islamic militants also suffered ‘losses’ that were not fully assessed by the joint forces, according to the police source.

Earlier in the day, the joint Iraqi forces had asked for urgent assistance from the US military, ‘who carried out an air raid on the village,’ causing some damage in the process.

The day before, a police station in the same village was attacked by mortar shells. Reportedly, those responsible for the incident were among those targeted in Sunday’s raid.

Iraq continues to be engulfed by violence as Premiere Nuri Al Maliki continues to promote his new-found Iraq security plan in which forces around Baghdad are expected to be boosted, and better equipped.

On Sunday, a source close to Al Maliki said that the date for the Iraqi plan to take effect remained ‘unknown’ and would not be announced for security reasons.

Shia MP Hassan Al Sanid told Iraqi press that Al Maliki would ‘surprise the militants and the outlaws.’

In another development, the US-led coalition announced Sunday that their forces captured 21 terror suspects around Iraq, including a senior Al Qaeda member, ‘an improvised explosives devices cell leader and a foreign fighter facilitator.’

http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticleNew.asp?xfile=data/focusoniraq/2007/January/focusoniraq_January193.xml&section=focusoniraq


288 posted on 01/28/2007 3:26:23 PM PST by TexKat (Just because you did not see it or read it, that does not mean it did or did not happen.)
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To: TexKat
"Iraq continues to be engulfed by violence as Premiere Nuri Al Maliki continues to promote his new-found Iraq security plan in which forces around Baghdad are expected to be boosted, and better equipped."

Now THAT'S the type of dogma we've grown to know and...uh...know.

292 posted on 01/28/2007 3:41:54 PM PST by cake_crumb (When "bipartisan study groups" prosecute wars, you get Another Viet Nam)
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