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IRAQ WARS
Suicide car bombs kill 5 at Baghdad Green Zone

81 hurt in Iraq clashes with protesters
Sulaimaniyah, Iraq (AFP) April 18, 2011 - Eighty-one people were wounded, nine by live fire, in a second day of clashes between protesters and security forces in Iraq's northern city of Sulaimaniyah Monday, a medical official said. "Eighty-one people were wounded, nine of them by bullets. Security forces personnel are among the wounded," said Dr Raykot Hama Rashid, director of the main hospital in the second largest city in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan province. The clashes took place in Peeramard Street in central Sulaimaniyah, which has seen near daily demonstrations since mid-February, and where Rashid had said 31 people were injured on Sunday, nine of them by bullets.

Security personnel, including from the Kurdish Peshmerga and Asayesh forces, surrounded the street, witnesses said. They said the forces torched a podium, preventing protest leaders from voicing their demands. Babaker Hussein from the Kurdish opposition Goran party said that shooting at protesters would only fuel larger demonstrations. "Shooting on the protesters will not stop them, and the government will see bigger demonstrations in the coming days," he told AFP.

But a spokesman for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of the two main parties that govern Iraqi Kurdistan, said the opposition had come prepared to provoke security forces. "It was planned by the opposition parties, and their announcements were known to us," said Azad Jandiyany. Protesters have been calling for an end to official corruption, resignation of the regional government and an investigation into the deaths of three young demonstrators in clashes with security forces in February.

Five people have been killed -- including two policemen -- and more than 100 have been injured during two months of demonstrations. Protests around Iraq against poor supply of basic services such as electricity grew after uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt toppled entrenched regimes in those countries and spread across the Arab world early this year. Since then, protests have erupted in different parts of Iraq at least every week, especially in the autonomous Kurdish north. But unlike the unrest and uprisings in other Arab countries, protesters in Iraq have not been demanding regime change, only reforms and better living conditions.

Controversial Iraq general mulls US senate run
San Antonio, Texas (AFP) April 18, 2011 - A controversial general who commanded US ground forces in Iraq during the Abu Ghraib scandal said Monday he is mulling a run under the Democratic ticket for a US senate seat in Texas. Retired lieutenant general Ricardo Sanchez is being recruited to try to fill the seat that will be vacated by Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison in the Republican-dominated Lone Star state. "I'm humbled that people are considering me for this," retired lieutenant general Ricardo Sanchez told AFP.

"I've served my country for many years and this would be another potential way for me to serve my country. At this point, no decision has been made." The Army exonerated Sanchez of any wrongdoing in the 2004 Abu Ghraib prison scandal which dealt a severe blow to the credibility of the US-led occupation of Iraq. He was also accused by some critics of not being up for the task of leading coalition ground forces after the Iraqi insurgency erupted under his command in 2003 and 2004. He declined to say what issues he would stress as a candidate for senate but said his childhood of abject poverty along the Texas border with Mexico led him to support the Democratic Party.
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) April 18, 2011
Two suicide car bombings killed five people and wounded 15 on Monday at the entrance to Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where an Arab League summit is due to be held next month.

Officials said the bombings occurred at around 8:30 am (0530 GMT) at the western gate into the Green Zone, which houses the offices of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's parliament and the US and British embassies.

A queue of cars was waiting to enter the Green Zone when the vehicles exploded, a security official said.

The blasts came after a weekend visit by a top US politician, who praised Iraq for being a "different country" compared to years past.

"Two suicide car bombs exploded at the western gate of the Green Zone," said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim Atta, who blamed Al-Qaeda for the attack and put the toll at five dead and 15 wounded.

"The bombings happened when there were several employees and officials entering the Green Zone," he added.

"The attack was trying to give the impression that the terrorists can target the Green Zone. There are clear Al-Qaeda fingerprints on these attacks."

A doctor at Al-Yarmuk hospital said they had received 13 wounded, nine of whom were members of Iraq's security forces.

The attacks come less than a month before an Arab League summit is due to take place in Baghdad on May 11, and the newly renovated Republican Palace where the talks are to take place sits inside the Green Zone.

The summit had originally been scheduled for March 29, and Arab League chief Amr Mussa said that the group should consider postponing it further while Gulf Arab states have already demanded that it be cancelled.

Iraq has not hosted a regular Arab summit since 1978, although an extraordinary summit was held in Baghdad in 1990.

The site of the attack, known as Entry Control Point 12, is the main entrance to the central Baghdad area for cars travelling from the capital's airport.

Anyone wanting to enter the Green Zone needs a badge issued either by the Iraqi security forces or the US military, with the badge's colour indicating whether their vehicle needs to be searched before being allowed to proceed.

US military spokeswoman Staff Sergeant Kelli Lane would only confirm "an incident this morning near the International Zone," but gave no details. The US military maintains a contingent of soldiers inside the Green Zone.

Parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, a political rival of Maliki, said the attack was because of the premier's failure to appoint ministers of interior, defence or national security, more than a year after parliamentary polls.

"There are major security violations taking place, and the government must work to prevent this and fight terrorist groups," he told a news conference. "Not nominating security ministers is the reason behind this attack."

Maliki is the acting minister of the interior, defence and national security.

A separate attack involving two roadside bombs in the upscale residential neighbourhood of Jadriyah in east Baghdad wounded five more people, three of them security force members, an interior ministry official said.

Gunmen also targeted jewellery shops in the Ameen district, also in the east, killing the owners of two stores, a security official said.

Police arrived as the attackers were in mid-heist, and one of the three gunmen was killed while the others got away, the official added.

Violence in Iraq has declined dramatically from its peak in 2006 and 2007 but attacks remain common, especially in Baghdad.

A total of 247 Iraqis died as a result of attacks in March, according to official data.

US House Speaker John Boehner hailed Iraq's march to self-governance in a statement released by his office on Sunday, saying: "Just four years ago, a terrorist insurgency was killing innocent civilians and wreaking havoc across the country."

"Today Iraq is a different country" as the last remaining US forces prepared to depart by year's end, said Boehner, who visited Iraq over the weekend as part of a six-member congressional delegation.



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IRAQ WARS
31 hurt in Iraq clashes with protesters
Sulaimaniyah, Iraq (AFP) April 17, 2011
Thirty-one people were injured, seven of them by live bullets, as demonstrators clashed with security forces in the northern Iraqi city of Sulaimaniyah on Sunday, a medical official said. "There were seven policemen and 24 demonstrators among the injured, including seven protesters wounded by live bullets," said Ricot Hama Rashid, director of the city's main hospital. Two local journalis ... read more







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