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05 April 2004
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Monday
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14 Safar 1425
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24 Iraqis, 4 foreign troops killed
NAJAF, April 4: At least 28 people, including four Salvadoran soldiers, were killed and 200 people wounded on Sunday as supporters of a Shia leader clashed with troops of the US-led coalition in Iraq.
The deadliest confrontation so far took place outside the shrine city of Najaf pitting supporters of firebrand scholar Moqtada Sadr against Spanish-led troops. At least 24 people, including the Salvadorans, were killed in this confrontation.
Other clashes took place in Baghdad and the southeastern city of Amara, where four people died in fighting with British soldiers. In an ominous development that threatens to widen the rift between Iraq's Shia majority and the occupation forces, Mr Sadr told his supporters on Sunday to "terrorize" the enemy as demonstrations were now pointless.
"There is no use for demonstrations, as your enemy loves to terrify and suppress opinions, and despises people," Mr Sadr said in a statement distributed by his office in Kufa, south of Baghdad.
"Terrorise your enemy, as we cannot remain silent over its violations," he said, although it was not clear whether Mr Sadr was literally calling on his followers to resort to violence. But Shia spiritual leader Ali Al Sistani appealed for calm and urged the demonstrators to resolve their differences with coalition forces through negotiation.
The coalition, meanwhile, named two staunch opponents of Saddam Hussein to head a new defence ministry and national intelligence service.overseer Paul Bremer said Iraq's new security institutions would "defend the country against terrorists and insurgents," and remain under tight civilian control.
Iraq's interim trade minister Ali Allawi was named as the country's first post-war defence minister, while Mohammad Abdullah Mohammad al-Shehwani, a former officer forced into exile by the Saddam regime, became intelligence chief. The clashes outside Najaf marked the most dangerous face-off between the coalition and Iraqis since the invasion.
They coincided with demonstrations in Baghdad and the southern port of Basra as Shia leaders pressed their demands for the coalition to reopen a newspaper close to Sadr that was shut down last week for 60 days on charges of inciting violence.
The militants also want the release of a top Sadr aide, Mustafa Al Yaacubi, who was detained by the coalition on Saturday in connection with the murder of a rival cleric last April.
In Najaf, Dr Hassan Al Dulami, head of health services, said: "There are at least 20 dead, including two policemen, and 200 wounded in the city's six hospitals."
In Madrid, the Spanish defence ministry said four Salvadoran soldiers belonging to the Spanish-led Plus Ultra Brigade were killed and nine other wounded in the clashes.
Accounts varied on how the fighting outside Najaf was ignited. A correspondent said the the Spanish brigade and started shouting at them: "No, no to America. No, no to Israel."
The convoy pulled back and then opened fire. The demonstrators were marching from Najaf to the neighbouring shrine town of Kufa. But they had planned to stop at the Plus Ultra base to demand the release of Yaacubi, although Spanish troops in Najaf have denied arresting him.
"The Spanish base was attacked around noon (0800 GMT). The assailants fired on our soldiers and they riposted by respecting rules of angagement," said Colonel Carlos Harradon, a spokesman for the Plus Utra brigade which includes Salvadoran, Honduran and Dominican soldiers.
In Baghdad, a senior coalition spokesman said the disturbances started earlier when a vehicle leaving a camp of the paramilitary Iraqi Civil Defence Corps (ICDC) came under fire, wounding some of the occupants.
Armed men in black later fired at the Spanish base, the spokesman added. Fearing that the Spanish-led troops might be overwhelmed and suffer significant casualties, coalition authorities called in planes and helicopter gunships which did not open fire, the official said.
Sporadic fire continued until the evening, the spokesman added. At least some of the Sadr supporters were carrying guns and belonged to the cleric's banned militia.
The Shia radicals, who have consistently opposed the coalition and the interim bodies it has set up in Iraq, have mounted daily protests since the closure of their newspaper.
Sunday's fighting came as UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Baghdad for his second visit in two months to help resolve an impasse between the coalition and the Iraqis over the nation's political future.
US MARINES KILLED: The US military, meanwhile, said two US Marines were killed in action by insurgents in the restive western Iraqi province of Al-Anbar, but it gave no further details for security reasons.
The deaths bring to 602 the number of US military and defence personnel killed in action since the coalition invaded Iraq in March last year, according to an official US tally.
In other incidents, four people were killed and eight wounded in clashes between British forces and Sadr militiamen in the southeastern city of Amara, hospital sources said.
In Baghdad's north eastern suburb of Sadr City, 10 people were injured in clashes between US forces and Sadr militiamen who seized a number of police stations, a photographer on the scene said.
CAR BOMB: In northern Iraq, a car bomb exploded in the oil centre of Kirkuk, wounding five Iraqi civilians and damaging a US military vehicle as US troops combed the area for a suspect vehicle, police chief Shirko Shaker Halim said. - AFP
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