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IRAQ WARS
US forces kill Iraqis after bombing: officials
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 19, 2011


US forces shot dead two Iraqi civilians south of Baghdad on Saturday following a bomb attack on their convoy, Iraq security officials said, while the US military denied its soldiers opened fire.

"A roadside bomb hit a US convoy in Yusifiyah on the road to Hilla," an interior ministry official said. "American forces opened fire randomly, killing two civilians and wounding five."

A police lieutenant in Yusifiyah, 25 kilometres (15 miles) south of Baghdad, confirmed the incident, which he said took place about 7:00 pm (1600 GMT), but put the toll at two dead and three wounded, one of them seriously.

Both spoke on condition of anonymity.

However, Colonel Barry Johnson, a spokesman for United States Forces - Iraq, said that US troops did not open fire, and that no injuries were reported.

"We have an operational report of an incident in that general area resulting from an IED (roadside bomb) attack against a convoy, (but) no shots were fired in response to the attack against our forces and there are no reported injuries," Johnson said.

The Thursday incident is the first reported killing of Iraqi civilians by US forces since US President Barack Obama announced on October 21 that American troops will depart Iraq by the end of 2011.

It could potentially lead to increased animosity against American forces, complicating US withdrawal efforts.

Two US soldiers have been killed in attacks since the withdrawal announcement. A total of 4,484 US soldiers who have died in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, according to an AFP tally based on data compiled by icasualties.org.

The Iraq war has stretched on for almost nine years, left tens of thousands of Iraqis dead, and cost hundreds of billions of dollars.

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Iraq bans Turkey flights in debt row: official
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 19, 2011 - Turkish aircraft will be banned from landing at Iraqi airports beginning on Sunday, after Ankara announced a similar move due to a row with Iraq over debts, a transportation ministry official said.

"The minister ordered that Turkish airplanes be forbidden from landing in Iraqi airports starting tomorrow (Sunday)," Karim al-Nuri, the media adviser to Iraqi Transport Minister Hadi al-Ameri, told AFP, adding that this includes the autonomous Kurdistan region in north Iraq.

"This is a response to a Turkish decision to stop Iraqi airplanes from landing in Turkish airports," Nuri said.

"The Iraqi stance is right and normal, considering what the Turkish authorities decided to do days ago," he said.

Nuri said the Turkish decision to ban Iraqi flights stems from a dispute with Iraq's State Oil Marketing Organisation over millions of dollars of debt owed to Turkey.

"They did not find a way to put pressure on Iraq except by stopping our airplanes from landing in their airports," he said.



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IRAQ WARS
Iraq airport dispute signals problems ahead
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 19, 2011
A bitter dispute over the fate of a military base in the contested Iraqi oil city of Kirkuk is providing an early glimpse of conflict potentially awaiting after the final pullout of US troops this year. Iraqi civilian and military officials on Thursday held a handover ceremony for the Hurriyah base, which includes the airport in Kirkuk, the capital of the ethnically mixed, oil-rich province ... read more


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