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Iraqi Deputy Foreign Minister
killed
Baghdad -
Gunmen killed a deputy foreign minister as he went to work Saturday,
the latest attack on Iraqi leaders in recent weeks. A radical cleric
whose uprising killed hundreds pledged to support the new government
if it works to end the U.S. military presence.
Bassam
Salih Kubba, Iraq's most senior career diplomat, was mortally wounded
in Baghdad's Azimiyah district, Foreign Ministry spokesman Thamir al-Adhami
said. The attack took place in a Sunni Muslim neighborhood where
support for Saddam Hussein was strong.
The attack was the second
assassination of a senior Iraqi figure in the past month. The head of
the now-disbanded Iraqi Governing Council, Izzadine Saleem, was killed
in a suicide car-bombing May 17 at an entrance to the heavily guarded
Green Zone headquarters of the U.S.-run occupation authority.
Despite the violence, the government
received an endorsement Friday from an unlikely source — radical
Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. In a sermon read to his followers by an
aide, al-Sadr said he was ready for a dialogue with the new government
if it works to end the U.S. military presence.
"I support the new interim
government," al-Sadr said. "Starting now, I ask you that we open a new
page for Iraq and for peace."
Another Governing Council member,
Salama al-Khafaji, escaped injury in a May 27 ambush south of Baghdad
but her son and chief bodyguard were killed. Council member Aquila al-Hashemi,
also a career diplomat, was assassinated last September.
U.S. officials had feared a major
upsurge of violence in the run-up to the power transfer and although
those predictions have so far not panned out, attacks on
infrastructure and security installations suggest a campaign to
undermine public confidence in the new Iraqi leadership.
On Friday, gunmen blew up a police
station in Yusufiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad, after driving off
outgunned policemen in a hail of small arms and rocket-propelled
grenade fire. It was the fourth such attack on a police station in the
past week.
Elsewhere, the U.S. military said it
was investigating the May 17 fatal shooting of an Iraqi male by an
American soldier in Baghdad. A statement said the Iraqi was an
"anti-Iraqi forces operative" who bragged that he had killed a 1st
Cavalry Division soldier.
During a raid to apprehend him, the
Iraqi tried to grab the weapon of a U.S. soldier "who shot and killed
the subject," the command said.
Last week, the command said it was
investigating a May incident in Kufa in which an Iraqi was shot dead
at close range by an American following a shooting at a checkpoint.
According to the Foreign Ministry
spokesman, Kubba and his driver were headed for his office when gunmen
drove up behind him and opened fire. The assailants then passed the
stricken vehicle and fired a second burst, the spokesman said.
Both Kubba and his driver were
wounded, and the deputy minister died later in hospital, the spokesman
said.
Kubba,
60, held a Master's degree in international relations from St. John's
University in New York, was one of several deputy foreign ministers.
He had served as acting chief the Iraqi mission to the United Nations
in New York and as Iraq's ambassador to China. Kubba also served on
the committee which ran the ministry after the fall of Saddam's
regime.
Elsewhere, two roadside bombs
exploded Saturday in Baqouba, 40 miles northeast of Baghdad, wounding
two coalition soldiers and two Iraqi policemen, the U.S. military
said.
In Baghdad, U.S. officials said they
were encouraged by the remarks from al-Sadr but noted he has made
contradictory statements on the issue in recent weeks. The young
cleric is under strong pressure from the mainstream Shiite clerical
hierarchy to soften his stand against the new government of Prime
Minister Iyad Allawi.
At the same time, he wants to
maintain his reputation as one of the few Iraqi leaders who stood up
publicly to the Americans.
In an interview Friday night with Al
Arabiya television, al-Sadr's spokesman, Ahmed al-Shibani, said the
cleric was ready for a dialogue with the government "on condition that
it works to end the occupation and clearly announces to the Iraqi
people and to the world that it rejects the occupation."
"It has to put a timetable for the
end of the occupation," al-Shibani said. "This is the main and
principled way to recognize this government and cooperate with it."
The U.S.-led occupation formally ends
June 30 with the transfer of sovereignty to Allawi's government, and
the U.N. resolution approved Tuesday by the Security Council sets a
deadline of 2006 for ending the multinational military presence.
The resolution also allows both the
interim government and the one due to be elected in January to
terminate the mandate for the force — although that appears unlikely.
American authorities also hope the
interim Iraqi government will win broad support among the 25 million
Iraqis and take the steam out of the Sunni Muslim-led insurgency and
the Shiite uprising al-Sadr launched in early April. -- Associated Press
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