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Six Iraqi protesters killed during
clash
By MATTHEW ROSENBERG, Associated Press Writer
Baghdad -
British soldiers and Iraqi police clashed Saturday with armed,
stone-throwing protesters in southeastern Iraq, killing six people.
U.S. officials acknowledged American soldiers mistakenly killed two
Iraqi policemen after they failed to identify themselves to a patrol.
In Baghdad, a senior U.S. military
officer confirmed that preliminary reports showed that a U.S. Army
medevac helicopter that crashed last week near Fallujah, killing all
nine soldiers aboard, was shot down.
And north of the capital, the U.S.
military said it was investigating allegations that soldiers killed
four Iraqi civilians who tried to pass a convoy this month in Tikrit,
Saddam Hussein 's hometown.
The shooting of the policemen
occurred Friday after paratroopers from the 173rd Airborne Brigade
responded to a report of "family fighting" in Kirkuk, about 150 miles
north of Baghdad.
Paratroopers spotted two men firing
into a house, said Maj. Josslyn Aberle, a spokeswoman for the 4th
Infantry Division. The men, who were wearing long coats, fled as the
troops approached and were joined by a third man, she said.
"The soldiers verbally warned the
three to stop and then fired warning shots," Aberle said. "The men
refused to comply and the soldiers took a defensive position and
fired," killing two of them and detaining the third.
All three were found to be Iraqi
policemen, Aberle said. The U.S. military is investigating why they
refused to identify themselves.
Saturday's trouble in Amarah, 200
miles southeast of Baghdad, started when hundreds of Iraqis angry over
the lack of jobs in town gathered in front of the office of the
U.S.-led coalition to demand work.
As the protesters grew agitated,
shots rang out from the crowd, a British military spokeswoman said. At
the same time, she said troops "received reports of small explosions
in the crowd."
Iraqi police, believing they were
under attack, opened fire into the crowd but did not hit any of the
protesters, she said. But witnesses said the police killed some of the
protesters.
British soldiers moved in with
armored vehicles to support the police, and protesters hurled at least
three explosive devices at them, she said.
One man "who was in the process of
throwing a device" was shot dead by the soldiers, the spokeswoman
said.
The crowd dispersed but later some of
them returned and lobbed two explosive devices at the armored cars.
Soldiers shot one of the attackers and apparently wounded him, she
added. Three other devices were thrown at the soldiers before tensions
eased.
Six people were killed and at least
11 wounded, according to Dr. Saad Hamoud of the Al-Zahrawi Surgical
Hospital. The British said they had reports of five deaths and one
injury. There were no casualties among police or soldiers.
In Baghdad, U.S. Brig. Gen. Mark
Kimmitt told reporters that "preliminary reports indicate" that the
Black Hawk medevac helicopter that crashed Thursday south of Fallujah
was probably "brought down by ground fire."
Iraqi witnesses said they saw a
missile strike the second of two medevac helicopters as they flew over
an area known for resistance against to the U.S.-led occupation.
The nine deaths aboard the helicopter
brought to 494 the number of American service members who have died
since the Iraq war began March 20.
Elsewhere, Danish soldiers uncovered
a cache of mortar shells Saturday in southern Iraq and preliminary
tests are underway to determine whether they contain chemical agents,
U.S. officials said.
The 30 to 40 120mm mortar shells,
which may have been left over from the Iran-Iraq War, were found
buried in the desert south of Baghdad and were wrapped in plastic bags
and some were leaking a mysterious fluid — leading officials to
suspect chemical weapons, according to the U.S. command.
Allegations that Saddam maintained
chemical and other weapons of mass destruction in violation of U.N.
orders was cited by the United States as the main reason for launching
the Iraq war. No such weapons have yet been found.
In Tikrit, the U.S. military said it
was investigating allegation that U.S. troops opened fire on a taxi
Jan. 3, killing four Iraqi civilians. Maj. Josslyn Aberle, a
spokeswoman for the 4th Infantry Division, declined to provide any
details of the investigation.
The lone survivor, Ibrahim Allawi,
says troops raked his car with gunfire as he tried to pass a convoy.
Police found Allawi and the others, including a 7-year-old boy, in the
bullet-riddled car. -- Associated
Press
Brudirect.com
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