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Saddam urges Muslims to join jihad
Baghdad - A
statement purported to be from the Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein,
was read out on Iraqi television tonight, calling for Muslims to join
in a holy war against the coalition invasion and that jihad was a
"duty". Iraqi state television had said earlier that
President Saddam would make the address personally but speculation he
may have been killed or injured was heightened when it was delivered
by his information minister, Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf.
The Foreign Office responded by
saying it was "interesting" that President Saddam had not
delivered the address himself, raising questions over why it had
instead been given by Mr Sahaf.
In the address, President Saddam
sought to appeal to the religious loyalties of his countrymen by
denouncing the Anglo-American invaders as "Satans" and said
that the enemy should be fought "everywhere".
The statement said: "The
aggression that the aggressors are carrying out against the stronghold
of faith is an aggression on the religion, the wealth, the honour and
the soul and an aggression on the land of Islam. Therefore, jihad
[holy war] is a duty in confronting them."
President Saddam added that
"those who are martyred will be rewarded in heaven. Seize the
opportunity, my brothers".
His message also sought to link the
military assault on Iraq with the occupation of Palestinian
territories by Israel, declaring: "Long live our country and
Palestine and our Arab nation."
The statement was issued as US forces
were reportedly within 50 miles of Baghdad and as B52 bombers were
pounding Republican Guard positions north of Kerbala.
President Saddam has delivered two
televised addresses since the attack began on March 20. It was unclear
why he did not appear in person, particularly as rumours persist about
his health. "Strike at them, fight them," President Saddam's
statement said. "They are aggressors, evil, accursed by God. You
shall be victorious and they shall be vanquished."
Earlier, Saudi Arabia's foreign
minister called for an end to the war, urging President Saddam to step
down to spare Iraq more bloodshed.
A spokesman for US central command
today backed soldiers who shot seven women and children at a
checkpoint and blamed the Iraqi regime for the killings.
Navy Captain Frank Thorp said initial
reports indicated the soldiers from the US 3rd Infantry Division had
acted properly in firing on a car that failed to stop at a checkpoint
in the southern Iraqi desert near Najaf last night.
According to the US military, the
soldiers motioned for the car to stop and fired warning shot when
their commands were ignored. When those shots were ignored the
soldiers fired shots into the car engine but it continued to drive
towards the checkpoint.
The soldiers then fired into the
passenger compartment of the vehicle.
Today, the 13th day of the conflict,
US marines shot dead another unarmed driver and badly wounded his
passenger at a roadblock in the southern town of Shatra, south of
Baghdad. He was shot at after his pickup truck was driven at speed
towards a checkpoint. "I thought it was a suicide bomb," one
of the soldiers who fired on the vehicle told Reuters.
Troops have been nervous, and have
been ordered to be more cautious, after the suicide car bomb attack on
Saturday which killed four US soldiers at a checkpoint, near Najaf
which is close to the scene of last night's killings.
Capt Throp said the blood of from the
incident was "on the regime of Saddam Hussein" because of
guerrilla tactics and the strategy of challenging coalition troops at
checkpoints.
However a different picture was
provided by the Washington Post which quoted the US captain at the
intersection as saying his forward platoon had failed to give the van
ample notice that it would be shelled. "You just [expletive]
killed a family because you didn't fire a warning shot soon
enough!" it quoted Captain Ronny Johnson telling his platoon
leader.
The newspaper also claimed ten people
were killed by the US gunfire.
British army spokesman Colonel Chris
Vernon said that the killings undermined attempts to win over the
local population, but told the BBC: "We must allow our junior
commanders who are doing the business on the ground to make these
split-second decisions as they think best."
Britain is in danger of simultaneous
terrorist attacks on it and the US because of the two countries
alliance in the war with Iraq, the home secretary David Blunkett
warned tonight.
Speaking in Washington, where he had
held joint talks with the US director of homeland security, Tom Ridge,
Mr Blunkett announced a new joint working group between the home
office and Mr Ridge's department to combat international terrorism.
Mr Blunkett said: "Because of
the conflict with Iraq we need to be more vigilant." He added
though that there was now "unprecedented cooperation"
between London and Washington. Mr Ridge said the meeting was to share
ideas and examples of "best practice". Blunkett warns of
twin terror threat
Heavy air raids pummelled the
Baghdad's southern and western outskirts today where Republican Guard
units man defensive lines, ready to face US troops advancing from the
south. After a night of bombing targeting the heart of the Iraqi
capital and Republican Guard units, the south of the capital was hit
by two explosions at dawn. A heavy detonation then broke a post-dawn
lull about 9am local time (0600 BST).
In a midnight raid, five huge blasts
hit the centre of the city and one of President Saddam's sprawling
compounds on the banks of the river Tigris.
The complex, used by President
Saddam, his son Qusay and aides, has been hit several times in the
past 48 hours.
Another explosion came from the
headquarters of the Iraqi Olympic Committee, which is headed by
President Saddam's eldest son, Uday. Human rights activists have
accused him of jailing and torturing athletes there.
Iraq's information minister, Mohammed
Saeed al-Sahaf, said the raids on Baghdad had killed 24 people and
wounded more than 125 since yesterday. He said 32 civilians had been
killed and more than 144 wounded in other parts of Iraq.
US warplanes later attacked targets
close to the oil city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq. Local Kurds said the
planes could be targeting an Iraqi arms depot but this could not be
confirmed.
Then just before 1700BST there was a
large explosion, ostensibly from a coalition bombing, on a site near
Kifri, a town east of Baghdad.
Reuters correspondents with US
military units said US troops yesterday fought Iraqi soldiers firing
from buildings and foxholes around a bridge over the Euphrates river
at Hindiya. This is the closest to the capital that ground fighting
has been reported.
US troops have also advanced to the
outskirts of Hilla, about 60 miles south of Baghdad. Iraq reported
fierce fighting in and around the city of Nassiriya, 235 miles
south-east of the capital, and said that invading troops had suffered
heavy casualties.
The prime minister, Tony Blair, today
told his war cabinet that the conflict in Iraq had entered its second
phase of "a steady advance" towards Baghdad.
Both Downing Street officials and, in
a later speech, the foreign secretary Jack Straw, stressed that more
military and civilian loss of life was inevitable in the coming
campaign - but both began to speak also of post-conflict Iraq.
Mr Straw said he favoured a United
Nations conference to bring together Iraqi Kurds, Shia and Sunnis to
form a new state after the war. Straw warns against snap judgments
No 10 was more circumspect than Mr
Straw, saying that in light of reports of a detailed United States
blueprint for an interim administration being prepared there were
"continuing discussions" on the subject.
Mr Blair's official spokesman said
that in areas already occupied by coalition forces, the fear factor
among the local population was now "receding day by day"
with troops increasingly being given a "warm welcome".
Iraqi civilians fleeing the southern
city today said that they faced pressure from members of the ruling
Ba'ath party not to rise up against President Saddam.
But resistance has continued in the
city, confounding British and US hopes that the Shia people of
southern Iraq would repeat their 1991 revolt against President
Saddam's largely Sunni leadership. That revolt was brutally put down.
Another British soldier has been
killed in southern Iraq, bringing the total British death toll to 26,
it was announced today. Excluding the latest casualty, 25 British
soldiers had died in the 13-day-old war so far, five in action and 20
in accidents or "friendly fire". -- Guardian News
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