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IRAQ WARS
Iraqi woman slain in US buried in Najaf
by Staff Writers
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) March 31, 2012

Iraq anti-Qaeda fighter killed with wife, son
Baghdad (AFP) March 31, 2012 - Unknown gunmen shot dead a member of the Sahwa anti-Qaeda militia forces along with his wife and son on Saturday north of Baghdad in Iraq's Diyala province, a security official said.

"Unknown gunmen broke into the house of Atia Khalil, a member of the Sahwa (Awakening) forces in Al-Sadat area, and opened fire on him," killing him, said the official in the Diyala Operations Command.

"The gunmen, who were carrying silenced weapons, also killed his wife, and his son," the official said.

The Sahwa are made up of Sunni tribesmen who joined forces with the US military against Al-Qaeda from late 2006, helping turn the tide of the insurgency.


Dozens of Iraqis participated in the funeral of Shaima Alawadi, an Iraqi woman who was beaten to death in California in what police have said may be a hate crime, in Najaf on Saturday.

Alawadi was found severely beaten in her home in El Cajon along with a note that reportedly told the family to go back to Iraq and called them "terrorists." She was taken off life support on March 24.

The deadly attack on Alawadi and the note found with her have drawn widespread condemnation.

People including local officials, members of parliament and tribal figures gathered at the airport on Saturday to receive Alawadi's body, according to an AFP journalist.

Prayers were said over her body in the shrine of Imam Ali, the son-in-law and cousin of the Prophet Mohammed and a revered figure in Shiite Islam, after which she was buried in the massive Wadi al-Salam cemetery that surrounds the shrine, where Shiites from around the world are laid to rest.

Her husband and two of her five children were present for the funeral.

"We do not know the reason for the crime. Shaima had no problems with anybody there," her father, Nabil Alawadi, told AFP.

"We call on the (Iraqi) government to intervene to pursue this case, and we call on the American government to reveal the circumstances of the incident and the motives and the identity of those" who committed the crime, he said.

Jim Redman, police chief of El Cajon, 15 miles east of San Diego, has said that "based on the contents of this note, we are not ruling out the possibility this may be a hate crime," describing it as "threatening," though he declined to reveal its specific contents.

But he added: "We are still in the very early stages of this investigation and have not drawn any conclusions at this point."

The family reportedly came to the United States from Iraq in the mid-1990s, when Iraq was hit by sanctions that strangled the country's economy and led to severe privation here following Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

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Iraq says death toll for March lowest since 2003 invasion
Baghdad (AFP) April 1, 2012 - The number of Iraqis killed in violence in March, when Baghdad hosted a landmark Arab summit, was the lowest monthly figure since the 2003 US-led invasion, official figures showed on Sunday.

In total, 112 Iraqis -- 78 civilians, 22 policemen and 12 soldiers -- died in attacks nationwide, according to figures compiled by the ministries of health, interior and defence.

The previous low for a month was in November 2009, when 122 people died.

March's death toll is markedly lower than the figure for February, when 150 Iraqis were killed, and is less than half the toll for the same month a year ago, when 247 people died.

A total of 357 people were wounded in violence last month, including 220 civilians, 85 policemen and 52 soldiers. The figures also showed that 30 insurgents were killed and 152 arrested.

Iraq's deadliest violence last month included a wave of attacks on March 20 that rocked 18 cities and towns nationwide, killing 50 people, and wounding 255 others.

Crucially, the Iraqi capital played host to a landmark Arab summit, the first to be held in Baghdad since now-executed dictator Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

The summit passed largely without violence, though a mortar landed near the Iranian embassy as the meeting of Arab leaders opened on Thursday, and a suicide attack in west Baghdad killed a policeman on Tuesday, when regional economy and finance ministers were meeting.

US forces, who led the invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, completed their withdrawal from Iraq at the end of last year. Now, just 157 soldiers remain under the US embassy, charged with limited training of Iraqi forces, along with a marine detachment responsible for securing the mission.



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Kuwait returns 44 detained fishermen to Iraq
Kuwait City (AFP) March 28, 2012
Kuwait on Wednesday returned to Iraq 44 fishermen and six vessels seized for crossing into its territorial waters, the interior ministry said. After the emir, Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, pardoned the men and ordered their repatriation, the fishermen and vessels were handed over to Iraqi authorities, it said in a statement, without stating when they were detained. Sheikh Sabah is due ... read more


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