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*IRAQ: latest news and developments

News from 25th May

Tribal leader killed in Mishahda
Gunmen shot dead a tribal leader on Wednesday in Mishahda, a town 50 km (30 miles) north of Baghdad, police said on Thursday.
Five bodies found near Tikrit
Near Tikrit - U.S. forces and Iraqi police found three bodies with bullet gunshot wounds, police said.
U.S. forces hand over five decomposed bodies in Balad
U.S. forces handed over five decomposed bodies to the hospital in the town of Balad north of Baghdad, doctor Firas al-Timimi said. He did not say where they were found, who they were or how they had died.
Roadside bomb kills 9 year old girl in Kirkuk
In other violence, a nine-year-old girl was killed when her family's car hit a roadside bomb near the northern oil centre of Kirkuk.
Gunmen assassinate member of Mosul Governorate Council
Unknown gunmen on Thursday assassinated a member of the Mosul Governorate Council [Muthanna Jassem Al-Hamadani] and his driver in western Mosul, police said.
2 Iranian drivers kidnapped in Iraq
Two Iranian truck drivers were kidnapped in the Iraqi city of Baquba Thursday, an Iraqi security source announced.
Father disputes suicide finding in soldier's death
A father is disputing a military finding that his daughter killed herself 14 months ago while serving in Iraq.
British soldier cleared in Iraqi's death
A military judge Thursday cleared a British soldier of killing a 15-year-old Iraqi who drowned after allegedly being forced into a canal.
Army says Fort Campbell-based soldier committed suicide
Army officials have ruled that a Missouri soldier who was based at Fort Campbell committed suicide while serving in Iraq last year...LaVena's father, John Johnson, says he doesn't believe his 19-year-old daughter's wound was "self-inflicted"
Four policemen wounded in Baghdad
Two policemen were seriously wounded when a roadside bomb went off near their patrol in the eastern New Baghdad district, police said...Two policemen were wounded when a roadside bomb went off near their patrol in northeastern Baghdad, police said.
Four corpses found in Baghdad
Four corpses were found in different districts of Baghdad, police said. The bodies showed signs of torture and had gunshot wounds in their heads.
Bomb kills 2 bodyguards in Tikrit
Two bombs exploded inside a Sufi religious building on Wednesday killing two bodyguards in Tikrit, police said on Thursday.
Two killed in Iraq attacks as gunmen kidnap Dujail judge
Two people were killed and eight wounded in a series of attacks in Iraq, as gunmen kidnapped a judge from Dujail, the Shiite town at the center of the trial of ex-president Saddam Hussein.
3 Killed In Baghdad Blast
a blast killed three people in the heart of the capital...The blast in central Baghdad occurred in a building on Tahrir Square, killing three and wounding 11, police Lt. Ali Mitaab said. Police suspect the building housed a bomb-making factory
Iraq general shot in latest attack
Gunmen shot and seriously wounded a senior Defence Ministry official in Baghdad, police said, in what appeared to be part of a campaign against the top echelons of Iraq's US-backed administration
 
According to icasualties own rough estimates taken from received news reports of the number of dead in Iraq this month is 994 people. Take into account that some 50 or so people are dying every day in Baghdad, some of which are accounted for in this total.

Jan-06 - 780
Feb-06 - 846
Mar-06 - 1094
Apr-06 - 1010
May-06 - 994 (to 25th May)

Numbers include both civilians and members of Iraqi police/army
 
Violent Baghdad deaths top 6,000
The bodies of 6,000 people, most of whom died violently, have been received by Baghdad's main mortuary so far this year, health ministry figures show. The number has risen every month, to 1,400 in May. The majority are believed to be victims of sectarian killings.

But observers say the real death toll could be much higher.

Meanwhile police said nine severed heads were found near Baquba to the north of Baghdad - days after a similar discovery there. In another development, Iraq's prime minister says he plans to release 2,500 prisoners. Nouri Maliki said the move, starting on Wednesday, is a gesture of "national reconciliation". Most of those to be released are Sunni Arabs, Iraqi officials say.

MORTUARY'S MONTHLY TOLL
January: 1068
February: 1110
March: 1294
April: 1155
May: 1398
 
Three British soldiers cleared over drowning of Iraqi
Three soldiers have been found not guilty of the manslaughter of an Iraqi boy, at a Colchester court martial. The trio had all denied the manslaughter of 15-year-old Ahmed Jabber Kareem, a non-swimmer who drowned in a Basra canal in May 2003.
Marines staged Iraq killing
Evidence has emerged U.S. Marines deliberately killed an unarmed Iraqi civilian in April in the town of Hamdaniya, CNN reported Tuesday. A military source with knowledge of a U.S. Naval Criminal Investigative Service investigation...
Baghdad targeted civilian killings soar in May
Nearly 1,400 Iraqi civilians died in a wave of targeted killings in Baghdad last month, according to a high-ranking Iraqi Health Ministry official.
Iraqi army takes over from US in rebellious area
An Iraqi army division has taken over from U.S. forces in patrolling an area in Anbar province, the U.S. military said on Tuesday, the first transfer on that level in the western heartland of the Sunni Arab insurgency.
Iraq To Release 2,500 Prisoners
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki today said he will order the release of 2,500 prisoners against whom there is no clear evidence. He said the prisoners would be released from U.S.-run detention centers and Iraqi custody.
Iraq PM promises to push ahead with efforts to curb violence
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki pledged Tuesday to push ahead with efforts to curb rampant sectarian and militia violence after a series of brazen attacks, including the kidnappings of 50 people in broad daylight in Baghdad.
Iraqi police kills two terrorists, arrests eight others
Iraqi Interior Ministry said Tuesday police forces have killed two terrorists and arrested eight others in different parts of the country. ...the ministry said one of terrorists was killed during a confrontation in Dayala governorate...
Government Investigates Iraq Contracting Fraud
The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction has 78 open investigations into fraud and corruption in the Coalition Provisional Authority. This spring, two men pleaded guilty to bribery and fraud.
Roadside bomb civilians in Baghdad
A roadside bomb killed one woman in Baghdad. Two people, including a teenage girl, were later killed when police who had sealed off the area opened fire when their car failed to stop despite warnings, witnesses said.
Gunmen kill husband and wife in Baghdad (no available link)
A man and his wife were gunned down in the western Furat district, medical sources said.
Gunmen kill council member in Baghdad
Gunmen shot dead Thoaban Abdul Kathim, head of the local council of Baghdad's western Al-Jihad district, along with an aide and a driver while they were heading to their office, medical sources said.
Mortar fire kills two in Baghdad
Two civilian were killed and seven others were wounded when two mortars hit a market in central Baghdad, police sources said...Three mortars landed near a hospital in central Baghdad...there were no immediate reports of any casualties.
Iraqi gunmen kill students
Gunmen killed at least 11 college students after stopping a bus in Baghdad and kidnapped up to 50 transport company employees in the Iraqi capital yesterday, Interior Ministry sources said.
Nine heads found along highway in Iraq
Iraqi police found nine heads Tuesday morning along a highway in the town of Hadid, about eight miles (13 km) west of Baquba, police and hospital officials said...the heads were wrapped in black plastic bags and shoved into fruit boxes.
Two college students killed in Baghdad
On Monday, gunmen in a car killed two Sunni brothers as they were driving to college in the religiously mixed neighborhood of Sadiyah in southwestern Baghdad, police Lt. Maitham Abdul Razzaq said. The victims, Ahmed and Arkan Sarhan.
Badr Brigade member killed
Gunmen in two cars killed Kadim Falhi Hussein al-Saedi, a member of the Badr Brigade, the armed wing of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, near his home in western Baghdad, police said
Italian soldier killed in Iraq
An Italian soldier was killed and four others were wounded when a bomb blew up the vehicle they were traveling in about 100 km (60 miles) from their base in Nassiriya in southern Iraq, the Italian army said.
 
Iraqi Shias murdered in sectarian massacre
The gunmen at the checkpoint were deliberate and methodical in their choice of targets, 26 people, including elderly men and teenage students, were taken out of three minibuses , lined up at the roadside and executed. The massacre at Baqouba, in north east Iraq, was a particularly bloody episode in the country's savage sectarian war of attrition. Those killed were Shias along with two Kurds, the killers spared four passengers who were Sunnis.

The deaths were not the only casualties in the communal conflict yesterday. In Basra nine people were killed in a firefight when members of the region's overwhelmingly Shia police force surrounded a Sunni mosque. The siege had begun just hours after a suicide bombing at a market place in the city had killed 28 people and injured 62 others. The sustained violence in the south had begun to escalate immediately after new prime minister Nouri al-Maliki had imposed a state of emergency in Basra and threatened to crack down with an "iron fist" on rival Shia militias vying for control.

The deaths in Baqouba occurred after the minibuses arrived at the outskirts of the city from the nearby town of Qara Tappah. Amomg those killed were 12 students on their way to take part in end of term examinations. The four Sunnis let go by the gunmen, also students, were being questioned by police. According to witnesses some of the students attempted to run away. But they were dragged back to stand alongside others from the minibuses before being shot. Communal violence has risen unremittingly since the bombing of a Shia shrine in February and Baqouba in Diyala province has been the scene of several attacks in the conflict. A police spokesman said "The insurgents had set up a checkpoint in the Udhaim area. They did not spare anyone, those killed included men in their 70s and boys of 15 and 16."

In Basra the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars claimed the attack on the Al-Arab mosque, which left it damaged and partly burnt, was a deliberate attack by the police and nine people who died had arrived to protect the building. The police insisted that they had received intelligence that armed men were hiding in the mosque which had also come to their attention while investigating the market bombing. They also claimed that two vehicles packed with explosives were discovered behind the mosque.
 
Oh dear.........

Concern Growing Over U.S. Troops' Ammo - Tests Raise Questions About Bullet For M-16 Rifle
As American troop casualties in Iraq continue to mount, concern is growing they may be outgunned. That includes new questions about the stopping power of the ammunition that is used by the standard-issue M-16 rifle.

Shortly after the U.N. headquarters was bombed in Baghdad in August 2003, a Special Forces unit went to Ramadi to capture those responsible.

In a fierce exchange of gunfire, one insurgent was hit seven times by 5.56 mm bullets, reports CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian. It took a shot to the head with a pistol to finally bring him down. But before he died, he killed two U.S. soldiers and wounded seven more.

"The lack of the lethality of that bullet has caused United States soldiers to die," says Maj. Anthony Milavic.

Milavic is a retired Marine major who saw three tours of duty in Vietnam. He says the small-caliber 5.56, essentially a .22-caliber civilian bullet, is far better suited for shooting squirrels than the enemy, and contends that urban warfare in Iraq demands a bigger bullet. "A bullet that knocks the man down with one shot," he says. "And keeps him down."

Milavic is not alone. In a confidential report to Congress last year, active Marine commanders complained that: "5.56 was the most worthless round," "we were shooting them five times or so," and "torso shots were not lethal."

In last week's Marine Corps Times, a squad leader said his Marines carried and used "found" enemy AK-47s because that weapon's 7.62 mm bullets packed "more stopping power."

Bruce Jones is a mechanical engineer who helped design artillery, rifles and pistols for the Marines.

"I saw the tests that clearly showed how miserable the bullets really were in performance," he says. "But that's what we're arming our troops with. It's horrible, you know, it's unconscionable."
 
From yesterday.....By theway this week BBC 10pm news have been doing "reports of the violence in Iraq" - Better than their usual effort but the daily totals they are giving don't include half of the reports cited here on on other web sites.

Four Iraqi oil employees kidnapped
FOUR Iraqi oil employees have been kidnapped on their way back from checking on an oilfield near the northern oil hub of Kirkuk, police and industry sources said today.
Booby-trapped car Kills 2, injures 17 in Iraq
A booby-trapped car killed Wednesday two Iraqis and injured 17 others in Al-Shoa'al neighborhood west of Baghdad, said a security source...the car was parked in street 60 in the neighborhood and exploded at approximately 8:30 pm.
Sunni mosque preacher killed in Hawija
Gunmen killed a Sunni mosque preacher in the town of Hawija, 60 km southwest of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk late on Tuesday, police said.
13-year-old boy killed in Basra
Defense officials in London say the troops fired baton rounds on about 100 people who were throwing rocks at them. However, Iraqi police say the soldiers fired at children throwing stones, killing a 13-year-old boy and wounding a girl who's 12.
Gunbattle kills man and his son
Authorities say a gunbattle left a man and his son dead and eight others wounded, including a baby and five women. It's not clear what caused the fighting.
22 Turkmens Murdered In North Of Baghdad
Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITC) stated that...a bus was waylaid with barricade erected on the road, and 26 passengers were separated into groups according to their religious sects, and then 22 Shiite Turkmens were killed.
Roadside bomb kills 2 policemen in Baghdad
Two police officers were killed and two policemen were wounded when a roadside bomb struck their vehicle in eastern Baghdad, police sources said.
Shopowners killed in Baquba
Gunmen stormed two neighbouring shops and killed their two owners in Baquba, police said.
Two Iraqi soldiers killed, four wounded in Baquba
Two Iraqi soldiers were killed and four were wounded in the town of Baquba...One of them died when a roadside bomb struck his patrol. Gunmen later opened fire on Iraqi troops coming to evacuate the wounded, killing the second soldier.
 
Bagdad bomb kills two policemen
A bomb targeting a police patrol killed two officers and four civilians and wounded 11 people in the New Baghdad area in the eastern part of the city, Lt. Ali Abbas said
Brother of Mosul's governor killed
In the hours after Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's death was announced, two things happened in Iraq. The prime minister named three key security ministers, ending...and insurgents killed dozens more people, including the brother of Mosul's governor.
Australian killed in Iraq bombing
The civilian from Queensland was killed by a roadside blast 300km north of the capital Baghdad yesterday. "We can confirm a 34-year-old Australian civilian from Queensland was tragically killed in a roadside bomb blast in Iraq on June 8,"
Bombs kill 26 people in Baghdad
Bombs killed 26 people and wounded 58 others in Baghdad on Thursday, the same day U.S. and Iraqi officials announced that American warplanes had killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al Qaeda leader in Iraq.
 
Iraqi activist details deaths at Haditha
BAGHDAD, Iraq An Iraqi human rights advocate says a few Marines accused of killing unarmed Iraqi civilians in Haditha went on a three-hour house-to-house hunt, while Marines nearby did not intervene.

An Associated Press interview with the activist (Thaer al-Hadithi) offers details, but largely follows other witness accounts that claim U-S Marines went on a vengeful rampage after a comrade was killed by a roadside bomb.

He says the first gunshots after the bombing came from the home of a blind and elderly man in failing health. Intense gunfire, a fire and "wailing and screaming" reportedly followed at another home where eight people were reported killed.

As many as 24 people may have died in the case that gained public attention after a video was released by the activist's human rights group.
 
Scum bags....
What are 5,000 South Africans doing in Iraq?0
South Africa had an obligation to oversee and regulate the thousands of militarily-qualified citizens selling their skills abroad, Parliament's Defence Portfolio Committee heard on Tuesday.

"If you keep dangerous animals in your yard, you have responsibility to ensure they don't get out and harm people," Defence Department official Siviwe Njikela told committee members.

He said an estimated 5 000-plus South Africans were working in Iraq "doing Lord knows what".

"If we have that kind of a population in Iraq, isn't it rather curious that we have no idea what they are doing there? The South African government should know -- that is the principle -- without infringing on their right to earn a living and practice their profession."
 
Riverbend.

American Hostages...

It was around the 10th or 11th of April, 2003. There had been no electricity in our area since the last days of March. The water was also cut off and most Iraqis still didn’t have generators. We spent the days- and nights- listening to American and British war planes, listening for the tanks as they invaded the city, and praying. We also tried desperately to follow the news.

The state-controlled Iraqi channels had, seemingly, ceased to exist. Transmission had been bad since the war began- sometimes, we’d be able to access the channel clearly, and at other times, it was only a fuzzy blur of faces and scratchy national anthems. The official Iraqi radio station was no better- sometimes it seemed like they were transmitting from Mars- it was so far away. When we did get it clearly, none of it made sense: Sahhaf, the Minister of Information, would say, “There are no tanks in Baghdad!” and yet, explosions and the carcasses of burnt up cars with families still inside, said otherwise.

By the beginning of April, we had given up on getting any information from television and had to rely completely on the news we received through radio stations such as Monte Carlo, BBC and the Voice of America. VOA was nearly as useless as Sahhaf- we could never tell if the news they were broadcasting was real or if it was simply propaganda. In between news, VOA would broadcast the same songs over and over and over. I still can’t hear Celine Dion’s “A New Day Has Come” without shuddering because in my head I hear the sounds of war. “I was waiting for someone…” the roar of a plane overhead … “For a miracle to come…” the BOOM of a missile… “My heart told me to be strong…” the rat-tat-tat of an AK-47... I hate that song today.
 
And again

Bad Day...
It’s been a horrible day. We woke up to unbearable heat. Our area averages about 4 hours electricity daily and the rest is generator electricity, which means we can use our ceiling fans, but there’s no way we can use air conditioners.

We woke up to an ominous silence- an indicator that the generator isn’t working. E. went next door to check and got a confirmation. It might not work all day. The neighbor responsible for it was going to bring by the ‘generator doctor’ as soon as he was free.

The electricity came at 6 pm for only twenty minutes- as if to taunt us. The moment the lights flickered on, we were gathered in the kitchen and we could hear the neighborhood children began to hoot and holler with joy.

Before that, we heard the news about the dozens abducted from the Salhiya area in Baghdad. Salhiya is a busy area where many travel agencies have offices. It has been particularly busy since the war because people who want to leave to Jordan and Syria all make their reservations from one office or another in that area.

According to people working and living in the area, around 15 police cars pulled up to the area and uniformed men began pulling civilians off the streets and from cars, throwing bags over their heads and herding them into the cars. Anyone who tried to object was either beaten or pulled into a car. The total number of people taken away is estimated to be around 50.

This has been happening all over Iraq- mysterious men from the Ministry of Interior rounding up civilians and taking them away. It just hasn’t happened with this many people at once. The disturbing thing is that the Iraqi Ministry of Interior has denied that it had anything to do with this latest mass detention (which is the new trend with them- why get tangled up with human rights organizations about mass detentions, torture and assassinations- just deny it happened!). That isn’t a good sign- it means these people will probably be discovered dead in a matter of days. We pray they’ll be returned alive
 
Iraqi police storm Basra mosque
A number of people have been killed after Iraqi police stormed a mosque in Basra.


Ali Muhammad, an Iraqi journalist, told Aljazeera that up to 16 people had been killed in clashes between the police and guards at the al-Arab mosque in the southern city on Saturday night.

According to Muhammad, witnesses said Iraqi National Guards and policemen stormed the mosque after fighting in the area that had lasted for three hours.

"All those inside the mosque have been killed," said Muhammad.

It is unclear whether policemen were among the dead.

Sunni group's statement

A Sunni religious group, the Sunni Endowment, described the incident as police gunning down unarmed worshippers.

Police, however, said they were returning fire against gunmen.

"Only worshipers were killed in the mosque. They killed unarmed people inside the mosque"

Sunni Endowment statement

Sunni Muslims accuse the Shia militias of infiltrating the Iraqi police and of carrying out killings against Sunni families.

In a statement, the Sunni Endowment said: "We accuse the security forces in Basra for what happened.

"Only worshippers were killed in the mosque. They killed unarmed people inside the mosque."
 
From the same article as above...

Mass grave uncovered
Meanwhile, the Iraqi High Tribunal is exhuming bodies from mass graves as it prepares trials against members of the former Iraq government under Saddam Hussein over the suppression of a 1991 Shia uprising.


Investigators have removed 28
skeletons from the site

In a remote desert location southwest of Baghdad, investigators on Saturday were removing 28 skeletons poking through the sand, their skulls blindfolded with scarves, hands tied behind backs and bullet holes in their clothes.

The bodies, still clad in the clothes they were killed in, were placed in body bags for transportation to Baghdad for analysis in the forensic labs in support of the eventual case.

Raed al-Juhi, the chief investigating judge of the Iraqi High Tribunal, said: "There are 200 sites registered with the Ministry of Human Rights, witnesses led us to these sites."

Juhi declined to speculate on when the case of the 1991 uprising, suppressed by the former Iraqi government after its defeat in the first Gulf war, would come to trial.
 
The shocking truth about the American occupation of Iraq
I remember clearly the first suspicions I had that murder most foul might be taking place in our name in Iraq. I was in the Baghdad mortuary, counting corpses, when one of the city's senior medical officials, an old friend, told me of his fears. "Everyone brings bodies here," he said. "But when the Americans bring bodies in, we are instructed that under no circumstances are we ever to do post-mortems. We were given to understand that this had already been done. Sometimes we'd get a piece of paper like this one with a body." And here the man handed me a U.S. military document showing with the hand-drawn outline of a man's body and the words "trauma wounds."

What kind of trauma is now being experienced in Iraq? Just who is doing the mass killing? Who is dumping so many bodies on garbage heaps? After Haditha, we are going to reshape our suspicions.

It's no good saying "a few bad apples." All occupation armies are corrupted. But do they all commit war crimes? The Algerians are still uncovering the mass graves left by the French paras who liquidated whole villages. We know of the rapist-killers of the Russian army in Chechnya.

We have all heard of Bloody Sunday. The Israelis sat and watched while their proxy Lebanese militia butchered and eviscerated its way through 1,700 Palestinians. And of course the words My Lai are now uttered again. Yes, the Nazis were much worse. And the Japanese. And the Croatian Ustashi. But this is us. This is our army. These young soldiers are our representatives in Iraq. And they have innocent blood on their hands.

I suspect part of the problem is that we never really cared about Iraqis, which is why we refused to count their dead. Once the Iraqis turned upon the army of occupation with their roadside bombs and suicide cars, they became Arab "gooks," the evil sub-humans whom the Americans once identified in Vietnam. Get a president to tell us that we are fighting evil and one day we will wake to find that a child has horns, a baby has cloven feet.

Remind yourself these people are Muslims and they can all become little Mohamed Attas. Killing a roomful of civilians is only a step further from all those promiscuous air strikes that we are told kill 'terrorists" but which all too often turn out to be a wedding party or -- as in Afghanistan -- a mixture of "terrorists" and children or, as we are soon to hear, no doubt, "terrorist children."
 
US air strike kills nine in Iraq
The US military in Iraq says its aircraft killed nine people in an attack on a "terrorist cell", but witnesses say the dead are civilians.
Planes were sent to bomb a house near Baquba after ground troops seeking to raid it came under fire from a rooftop, the US military said.

Coalition troops later found the bodies of seven adults, described as "terrorists", and two children...

...Mohammed Abbas, a relative of the dead, told the French news agency AFP the air strike raid had been triggered by an error on the part of the local guard...

...Mr Abbas described the nine dead as two adults and "seven children and youngsters".

Another witness, Shahin Abdullah, said local people were not used to US troops doing foot patrols.
 
Gunmen shoot dead 4 worshippers, wounds 14 in Iraq's Tikrit
Unknown gunmen shot dead four worshippers and wounded 14 others in a pre-dawn attack on Thursday at a Sunni mosque in a town near Tikrit, some 170 km north of Baghdad, a local police source said.

60 UK soldiers a month suffer mental illness
The number of British soldiers diagnosed with psychiatric problems brought on by the stress of service in Iraq has dramatically escalated since the beginning of the war, according to new figures from the Ministry of Defence in London Thursday.

Young Iraqis plagued by attacks on students
Ali Jassim's parents begged him to take a month off from school after his friend was gunned down as the two men left their university in Baghdad. He refused, saying it's important not to let the insurgents win an apparent campaign against students

Bomb blast and flames — a close call in Baghdad
But nothing prepared me for the scene unfolding on the wide, two-laned road in Baghdad’s northern Qahira district, a mixed Sunni and Shi’ite area of the capital.

Iraq Refugees Flee for Jordan, Syria
More than 650,000 Iraqis fled their homeland for Jordan and Syria since the beginning of 2005, according to a refugee survey released on Wednesday.

U.S. Marine being probed over song on killing Iraqis
The U.S. Marine Corps is investigating whether a Marine did anything wrong by singing an obscenity laced song to a laughing and cheering crowd of fellow U.S. troops in Iraq making light of killing Iraqis.
 
Iranian consulate in Basra attacked by followers of Shiite cleric
About 500 followers of a radical Shiite cleric attacked the Iranian consulate in Basra Wednesday, throwing stones and setting fire to a building in anger over an Iranian television program they said insulted their leader.

Thousands resign from Britain's reserve army amid concern over Iraq
Nearly 16,000 troops have quit Britain's reserve army since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, a newspaper reported.

Violence dips as crackdown begins in Baghdad
Fears of being killed by Shiite militants have confined Mohammed Yehia to his Sunni neighborhood in north Baghdad since the Feb. 22 destruction of a revered shrine unleashed rampant sectarian violence across Iraq.

Bullets 'flooding Baghdad market'
A lack of international control over the global bullets trade is partly to blame for the spiralling bloodshed in Iraq, a report has found. Research carried out by the UK-based charity Oxfam says Baghdad's black market is awash with new ammunition.
 
Followers of Shiite cleric protest Bush's visit to Iraq
Some 2,000 followers of a radical Shiite cleric staged a noisy demonstration Wednesday in Baghdad to protest the surprise visit to Iraq by President Bush.
Police kill suicide bomber
Police killed a suicide bomber when he tried to detonate his car near a police checkpoint 15 km (8 miles) southwest of the northern city of Kirkuk, police said.

Two policemen killed in Karbala
In Karbala, gunmen shot dead a police captain and another policeman.

Bomb kills four civilians and one policeman in Baquba
Four civilians, including a two-year-old child, and a policemen were killed in a series of attacks in Baquba, northeast of Baghdad.

Bomb kills four civilians in Samarra
A bomb targeting a police patrol in the Samarra market missed its target but killed four civilians and injured seven.

Three policemen killed in Balad Ruz
Gunmen killed three policemen and wounded three others in Balad Ruz, southeast of Baquba, while a man distributing newspapers in Fallujah was shot dead by gunmen.

6 Bodies found in Baghdad
Police found 6 bodies, showing signs of torture, in different parts of Baghdad, police sources said.

University Professor killed in Baghdad
Gunmen shot dead Baghdad University Professor Muthana Harith Jassim, police sources said.
 
Worth the read. Not seen this piece anywhere in the mainstream media.......

Ramadi: Fallujah Redux - By Dahr Jamail
Fearful residents are now pouring out of Ramadi after the US military has been assaulting the city for months with tactics like cutting water, electricity and medical aid, imposing curfews, and attacking by means of snipers and random air strikes. This time, Iraqis there are right to fear the worst - an all out attack on the city, similar to what was done to nearby Fallujah.

It has always been just a matter of time before the US military would finally get around to destroying Ramadi, the capital city of al-Anbar province. After all, Ramadi is not far from Fallujah, and so similar to Fallujah both tribally and in their disdain towards the idea of being occupied, that many people in Ramadi even refer to Fallujah as "Ramadi." I know many people from Ramadi who lost relatives and friends during both US assaults on Fallujah, and the level of anti-American sentiment has always been high there.

By now, we all know the scene when the US military in Iraq decides to attack an entire city ... we've seen this standard operating procedure repeated, to one degree or another, in Haditha, Al-Qa'im, Samarra, parts of Baghdad, Balad, Najaf and Fallujah twice ... so far. The city is sealed for weeks if not months, water and electricity are cut, medical aid is cut, curfews imposed, mobility impaired, air strikes utilized, then the real attack begins. Now in Ramadi, the real attack has begun.

Warplanes are streaking the sky as bombings increase, loudspeakers aimed into the city warn civilians of a "fierce impending attack," (even though it has already begun), and thousands of families remain trapped in their homes, just like in Fallujah during both attacks on that city. Again, many who remain in the city cannot afford to leave because they are so poor, or they lack transportation, or they want to guard their home because it is all they have left.

Sheikh Fassal Guood, a former governor of al-Anbar said of the situation, "The situation is catastrophic. No services, no electricity, no water." He also said, "We know for sure now that Americans and Iraqi commanders have decided to launch a broad offensive any time now, but they should have consulted with us."

Today, a man who lives in Fallujah and who recently visited Ramadi told me, "Any new government starts with a massacre. That seems like the price that we Iraqis must pay, especially in the Sunni areas. Ramadi has been deprived of water, electricity, telephones and all services for about two months now. US and government forces frankly told people of Ramadi that they will not get any services unless they hand over 'the terrorists!!' Operations started last week, but it seems that the Marines are facing some problems in a city that is a lot bigger in area than Fallujah. (Ramadi also has at least 50,000 more residents than Fallujah.) Killing civilians is almost a daily process done by snipers and soldiers in US armored vehicles. The problem that makes it even more difficult for the Ramadi people than for those of Fallujah back in 2004 is that they cannot flee to Baghdad, because there they'll face the government militia assassinations. Nevertheless, the US Army is telling them to evacuate the city. On the other hand, the government and the US Army made it clear that they will bring militias to participate in the wide attack against the city. The UN and the whole world are silent as usual, and nobody seems to care what is going to happen in Ramadi."
 
More on the number of bodies in Baghdad morgues. Horrifc stuff. :(

Horror show reveals Iraq’s descent
THE morning rush had begun at the health ministry’s morgue in Baghdad, and by 9.30am last Thursday 36 coffins already lined the street outside. A muffled wailing came from the minibuses parked nearby where women shrouded in black waited to go inside and search for loved ones, knowing too well what they would find.
The single-storey Al-Tub al-Adli morgue, whose nondescript appearance belies the horrors within, has become synonymous with the seemingly unstoppable violence that has turned Baghdad into the most frightening city on earth.


It is here that bodies from the nightly slaughter are dumped each morning. The stench of decaying flesh, mingled with disinfectant, hits you at the checkpoint 100 yards away.

Each corpse tells a different story about the terrors of Iraq. Some bodies are pocked with holes inflicted by torturers with power drills. Some show signs of strangulation; others, with hands tied behind the back, bear bullet wounds. Many are charred and dismembered.

So far this year, according to health ministry figures, the mortuary has processed the bodies of about 6,000 people, most of whom died violently. Some were killed in American military action but many more were the victims of the sectarian violence that US and Iraqi forces are struggling to contain.

For all the coalition’s recent successes in securing elections that brought a new government to power and in killing Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the commander of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, the morgue remains a chilling reminder of the scale of the challenge ahead.

It receives 20 to 30 bodies on a quiet day. Last month it processed a record 1,384. Most autopsies have been cancelled; there are simply not enough doctors or officials to cope.

.......

As a former trauma specialist in a hospital casualty department, Dr Baker Siddique, 29, thought he was inured to scenes of carnage. But nothing he had witnessed prepared him for a visit to a pathologist friend working at the mortuary.

“I saw a street packed with people and coffins standing up vertically,” he said. “There wasn’t enough room to lie them horizontally.”

His voice faltered and his eyes filled with tears as he recounted the agony of a woman in black who discovered the bodies of her four sons that day.

“I have never heard screams of pain like that,” he said. The woman collapsed on the floor, throwing dirt over her head — a gesture of grief and helplessness that has become tragically commonplace in Iraq.

As the doctor talked to his friend, a police pickup truck pulled up with a dozen or more bodies piled in the back. “I could not believe that the dead were brought in such a way,” Siddique said. “They were one on top of the other like animal carcasses.”
 
Iraqi insurgents fuel sectarian divide with kidnap of 85 Baghdad factory workers
Scores of factory workers were seized at gunpoint as they finished their shift at an industrial complex north of Baghdad yesterday, in what appeared to be the latest mass kidnapping by insurgents bent on fomenting sectarian strife.
Police sources said up to 85 workers, many of them from Shia areas in northern Baghdad, had been taken to an unknown location by gunmen who had stormed a convoy of buses about to take the employees back to the capital.

They were taken at the Nasr General Complex in Taji, 12 miles north of Baghdad, a predominantly Sunni-Arab area with a heavy insurgent presence.

Under the former Ba'athist regime, the factory was part of a huge state-owned military-industrial complex, but government officials said it now makes school benches and blackboards. Kamel Muhammad, an engineer working at the plant, told Associated Press he had seen two of the plant's buses and a mini-van intercepted by gunmen in three cars. Other workers leaving the plant in their own cars were ordered to get into the buses. The mass abductions of Iraqi civilians are an increasingly favoured tactic on both sides of the Shia-Sunni divide.
 
So you mean: Because the paid US soldiers who chose to join the military are because of that heroism not rewarded with being housed in Five Star Hotels in Iraq, they have a free licence to murder Iraqis in their own houses, in their own country?
I suppose you see this as some innocent "rabit shooting" to "relieve tensions" for not having Five-Star Hotel accomodations including hunting licence?
 
no not at all, quite the opposite. i think the occupying forces are a destructive and detrimental presence in iraq. they have no right to murder innocent civilians ever. the point i was making was that the total collapse of discipline, and the 'feral' living conditions they are in are but two of many accumalating factors that will speed their pscychological breakdown, meaning imv they are more likely to commit massacres.
 
Iraq death toll at least 50,000
At least 50,000 Iraqis have died violently since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, according to statistics from the Baghdad morgue, the Iraqi Health Ministry and other agencies - a toll 20,000 higher than previously acknowledged by the Bush administration. Many more Iraqis are believed to have been killed but have not been counted because of serious lapses in recording the number of deaths in the chaotic first year after the invasion, when there was no functioning Iraqi government, and because of continued spotty reporting nationwide.

The toll, which is dominated by civilians but likely also includes some security forces and insurgents, is daunting: Proportionately, it is as if 600,000 Americans had been killed nationwide during the past three years. In the same period, at least 2,521 U.S. service members have been killed in Iraq. Iraqi government officials involved in compiling the statistics say violent deaths in some regions have been grossly undercounted, notably in the troubled province of Anbar, where local health workers are often prevented from compiling the data because of violence, security crackdowns, electrical shortages and failing telephone networks.

The Health Ministry acknowledged the undercount. In addition, the ministry said its figures exclude the three provinces that make up the semiautonomous northern region of Kurdistan because Kurdish officials do not provide death toll figures to the government in Baghdad. In the three years since Saddam Hussein's regime was toppled, the Bush administration has rarely offered civilian death tolls. Nongovernmental organizations have made estimates by tallying news accounts; the Los Angeles Times attempted to reach a comprehensive toll by obtaining figures from the Baghdad morgue and the Health Ministry and checking those numbers against a sampling of local health departments for undercounts.

The Health Ministry gathers numbers from hospitals in the capital and the outlying provinces. If a victim dies at the hospital or arrives dead, medical officials there will issue a death certificate. Relatives will claim the body directly from the hospital and arrange for a speedy burial according to Muslim beliefs. If the morgue receives a body - usually those which are deemed suspicious deaths - officials there issue the death certificate.

Health Ministry officials said that because death certificates are issued and counted separately, the two data sets are not overlapping. The Baghdad morgue received 30,204 bodies from 2003 through mid-2006, while the Health Ministry said it had documented 18,933 deaths from what were described as military clashes and terrorist attacks between April 5, 2004, and June 1, 2006. Taken together, the violent death toll reaches 49,137. However, samples obtained from local health departments in other provinces show an undercount that brings the total number well beyond 50,000.
 
The problem with all this "counting" is that so many are buried withouth passing hospitals or morgues.
One should go counting every single death certificate written since the first day of the invasion, which is an impossible task. Furthermore I wouldn't count it for impossible that a number of victims were buried without - or before - having such a certificate. Especially during the glorious days of "liberating the poor Iraqis" with "shock and awe" mass bombing, and other such minor humanitarian raids. (Then I don't even speak of those who weren't found back or couldn't be identified.)

salaam.
 
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