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Iraq violence kills 5, possible
chemical arms found

Baghdad -
British troops said they opened fire on grenade-throwing Iraqi
protesters in a clash in which at least five people were killed on
Saturday, while Danish forces reported finding possible chemical
weapons in southern Iraq.
The violence began when Iraqi police
believed they were the target of gunfire during a protest over
unemployment in the southeastern city of Amara, Britain's Defense
Ministry said in a statement in London.
The police opened fire and British
troops with armored vehicles were deployed to support them, the
ministry said.
The British troops also opened fire
when grenades were hurled at them, it said.
"It is our understanding that there
have been six casualties -- five fatalities and one injured," said the
ministry. It said it could give few details on the deaths, but no
British or Iraqi police casualties were reported.
Iraqi police said earlier they opened
fire after the protesters began throwing stones at the provincial
government's headquarters.
A number of protests over lack of
jobs have been staged in Iraq since Saddam Hussein was toppled by
U.S.-led forces last April and some have turned violent.
Denmark said its troops had found 36
mortar shells buried in southern Iraq that initial chemical weapons
tests showed could contain blister gas. The shells had been buried for
at least 10 years and the site may contain another 100, it said.
"All the instruments showed
indications of the same type of chemical compound, namely blister
gas," the Danish Army Operational Command said on its Web site,
cautioning further tests were needed. Final results were likely in
about two days.
Blister gas, an illegal weapon which
Saddam said he had destroyed, was used extensively against the
Iranians during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war.
Icelandic bomb experts working with
the Danes said the 120mm shells were concealed in road construction
some 45 miles south of Amara and close to the Iranian border.
President Bush ordered U.S.-led
forces to invade Iraq after accusing Saddam of possessing weapons of
mass destruction. No such arms have been found so far.
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul
O'Neill, fired in December 2002 as part of a shake-up of Bush's
economic team, said in a new book "The Price of Loyalty" the president
entered office in January 2001 intent on invading Iraq.
O'Neill, who likened Bush at cabinet
meetings to a "blind man in a room full of deaf people," was quoted in
the book as saying: "It was all about finding a way to do it... The
president saying, 'Go find me a way to do this'."
"For me, the notion of pre-emption,
that the U.S. has the unilateral right to do whatever we decide to do,
is a really huge leap," O'Neill said in a CBS interview to be aired on
Sunday to promote the book by journalist Ron Suskind.
The White House rejected O'Neill's
charges.
The U.S. military said a preliminary
investigation showed the U.S. Black Hawk helicopter that crashed near
the town of Falluja in central Iraq last Thursday was shot down by
guerrillas. All nine soldiers on board were killed.
Washington blames Saddam supporters
and foreign Islamic militants for attacks on U.S.-led forces and
Iraqis cooperating with U.S. governor Paul Bremer's administration in
Baghdad.
The U.S. military said U.S. soldiers
shot and killed two Iraqi policemen embroiled in a family feud in the
northern city of Kirkuk after mistaking them for assailants.
Occupation Watch, an international
group of peace and justice organizations monitoring the conduct of U.S-led
forces, said Washington was negligent and callous with Iraqis seeking
compensation for relatives accidentally killed or maimed.
After Washington declared major
combat over on May 1, the U.S. military said it would hear claims from
Iraqis whose family members were killed or wounded in incidents
involving U.S. troops as long as they occurred in non-combat
circumstances.
"There is a culture of impunity,"
Occupation Watch's researcher Paola Gasparoli told a news conference
in Baghdad at which the group presented a 30-page report.
The image of Saddam, captured by U.S.
troops in December, was officially erased from another walk of Iraqi
life when new postage stamps were unveiled at Baghdad's main post
office.
"It makes a nice change because
Saddam's face was everywhere -- not just on stamps," said postal
worker Leila Khadar. -- Associated
Press
Brudirect.com
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