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4 US, 7 Iraqi
troops killed in suicide blasts
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD (Iraq)—Four American soldiers were killed in weekend explosions,
the U.S. military said Sunday, and a suicide bomber killed at least
seven Iraqi policemen north of the capital.
Three soldiers from the 89th Military Police Brigade, were killed
Saturday in east Baghdad when a roadside bomb detonated, the U.S.
military said. The fourth, assigned to the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st
Cavalry Division, died Saturday in an explosion in Diyala east of the
Iraqi capital.
With their deaths, at least 2,969 members of the U.S. military have died
since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an
Associated Press count. In Muqdadiyah — about 55 miles northeast of the
capital — a suicide bomber killed at least seven policemen and wounded
30 at a police station. Insurgents then launched six mortar rounds.
Shortly after the suicide bombing, two roadside bombs exploded next to
one another in Khanaqin, about 90 miles northeast of Baghdad, close to
the Iranian border, police said. The coordinated attacks wounded 18
civilians, some seriously.
In the south, at least five police have been killed in Samawah, where
Shiite fighters attacked police headquarters and other government
buildings with rocket-propelled grenades. Police have been battling the
fighters since Friday.
Brig. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, spokesman for the Interior Ministry, did not
identify the gunmen in Samawah, but police said they belonged to a
militia formed by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Al-Sadr has
lost control of some elements of his militia, and it was unclear whether
the gunmen in Samawah considered themselves loyal to the cleric or were
a renegade group intent on local control.
About 40 suspected militiamen were captured, a police official said on
condition of anonymity out of concern for his safety. Khalaf said tribal
leaders were trying to intervene in an effort to stop the violence in
Samawah, the capital of Muthana province, about 230 miles southeast of
Baghdad.
Muthana was under control of British forces until July, when it became
the first province to revert to Iraqi control. Maj. Charlie Burbridge, a
spokesman for British forces in the neighboring province of Basra, said
no multinational forces are left in Muthana province. “From time to
time, there have been clashes there,” he said. “There are often tribal
clashes, and rogue militias often exacerbate the situation. But the
problem isn’t big enough for provincial authorities to request help from
multinational forces.”
The Italian military transferred neighboring Dhi Qar province to Iraqi
troops in September. Last week, U.S. forces ceded control of Najaf, the
third of Iraq’s 18 provinces to be handed over to Iraqi forces.
A suicide bomber killed at least seven Iraqi policemen northeast of
Baghdad Sunday, as Iraqi police and soldiers battled Shiite militiamen
in a southern city, authorities said.
In Muqdadiyah — about 55 miles northeast of the capital — a suicide
bomber killed at least seven policemen and wounded 30 others at a police
station. Insurgents then launched six mortar rounds at the station.
Shortly after the suicide bomber attack, two roadside bombs exploded
next to one another in Khanaqin, about 90 miles northeast of Baghdad,
close to the Iranian border, police said. The coordinated attacks
wounded 18 civilians, some seriously.
In the south, at least five police have been killed in Samawah, where
Shiite fighters attacked police headquarters and other government
buildings with rocket-propelled grenades. |