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Baghdad's Green Zone attacked
again
Baghdad -
The fortified Green Zone in Iraq's capital came under mortar
or rocket attack again Monday, despite the call a day before from a
radical Shiite cleric for his fighters to stand down.
A key adviser to Iraq's prime
minister, meanwhile, said military operations in an oil-rich
southern city besieged by nearly a week of fighting will end within
days.
Sami
al-Askari also said most of Basra, where the government attempted to
crack down on militia fighters, was "under control" a day after
Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took his Mahdi Army off the streets.
Fighting between al-Sadr's
followers and Iraqi and coalition troops raged since Tuesday, when
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki began military operations
against the group and vowed to remain in Basra until the mission was
accomplished. The battles there sparked violence in other southern
cities and in Baghdad.
"Before the end of this week, the
operations will come to an end and al-Maliki will be back to
Baghdad," said al-Askari, though he gave no exact date for the prime
minister's return.
Despite the relative calm that
prevailed in Basra, rockets or mortars again landed in the Green
Zone, the area housing the U.S. and British embassies along with
much of the Iraqi government.
The U.S. Embassy confirmed the
attacks and said no serious injuries were reported. The U.S.
military said it had no reports of major damage. The Green Zone has
come under frequent attack since Easter Sunday. At least two
Americans working for the U.S. government have died.
The government of al-Maliki,
himself a Shiite, welcomed the move by al-Sadr to call off his
fighters. After nearly a week of battling the militia, the Iraqi
army had made little headway in Basra and large swaths of the city
remain under the Mahdi Army's control.
An estimated 400 people have been
killed as fighting spread to Baghdad neighborhoods and other
southern cities.
A nine-point statement by al-Sadr
also called on the government to halt its raids on his followers,
indicating that the lull in fighting between his militia and
government forces is fragile.
The Sadrists have complained that
the government has released few of their followers under a new
amnesty law, which they allege has favored Sunnis who have recently
joined with the Americans to fight al-Qaida.
The cleric's decision offered a way
out of a widening Shiite conflict at a time when government forces
appeared to be making little headway against the well-armed militias
in Basra.
Al-Sadr's order stopped short of
calling on his fighters to disarm. And the government insisted it
would still target "outlaws."
In Basra some supermarkets and
stores were open on Monday, but residents said few people were
venturing out.
In Baghdad, a citywide curfew was
lifted, although a vehicle ban remained on three strongholds of al-Sadr's
Mahdi Army militia in the capital.
Sadr City, a Shiite stronghold from
where many of the mortars and rockets landing in the Green Zone are
believed to be launched, was calm, residents said. Cars and buses
were moving within the sprawling neighborhood, though they weren't
allowed to leave the area.
In other parts of Baghdad, shops
and schools were open and people were heading to work.
Elsewhere, unknown gunmen in a car
attacked a checkpoint manned by U.S.-backed Sunni fighters near
Buhriz, about 35 miles north of Baghdad, police said. Four of the
fighters were killed. -- Associated
Press
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