lennart
25-05-04, 15:48
Sacred Shrine Damaged as Fighting Kills Nine Iraqis
Parts of one of the most sacred shrines of Shia Islam suffered damage during clashes today between US forces and radical Shiite militiamen that left at least nine people dead.
In Baghdad, a car bomb near a hotel wounded at least five Iraqis, the US military said. The target of the blast, about 100 yards from the Australian Embassy, was not immediately clear.
After the fighting in Najaf eased, people gathered at the Imam Ali shrine to look at the damage. The inner gate of the shrine, leading into the tomb of Imam Ali Ibn Abu Talib, appeared to have been hit by a projectile.
Al-Jazeera television showed a torn veil covering the door to the inner shrine, and damage on the wall above it. It also showed several injured people lying on the floor of the mosque compound, and an angry crowd of more than 100 shouting and shaking their fists.
Supporters of Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr accused the Americans of firing mortars at the mosque.
Imam Ali was the Prophet Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law and he is the most revered saint among Shiite Muslims.
The latest violence come after President Bush said in a nationally televised speech that the United States would stay in Iraq until it was democratic and a long-awaited US-British blueprint for a post-occupation Iraqi government was presented to the UN Security Council.
Residents described the fighting in Najaf as some of the fiercest since the eruption of fighting there last month.
Fighting raged after daybreak. Explosions and gunfire were heard around the city’s Revolution of 1920 Square and the cemetery, a warren of paths and tombs that offers numerous hiding places for rebels armed with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.
Seven people were killed and five injured in Najaf today, said Seyed Kifah Shemal, an official at Hakim General Hospital.
Two people died and 14 were injured in overnight fighting in Kufa, said Riyadh Kadhem, a nurse at the Forat al-Awsat hospital in Kufa.
The toll among Iraqis could be higher because militiamen often avoid taking their casualties to hospitals, fearing arrest by American troops.
There were no reports of US casualties.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=2973093
Parts of one of the most sacred shrines of Shia Islam suffered damage during clashes today between US forces and radical Shiite militiamen that left at least nine people dead.
In Baghdad, a car bomb near a hotel wounded at least five Iraqis, the US military said. The target of the blast, about 100 yards from the Australian Embassy, was not immediately clear.
After the fighting in Najaf eased, people gathered at the Imam Ali shrine to look at the damage. The inner gate of the shrine, leading into the tomb of Imam Ali Ibn Abu Talib, appeared to have been hit by a projectile.
Al-Jazeera television showed a torn veil covering the door to the inner shrine, and damage on the wall above it. It also showed several injured people lying on the floor of the mosque compound, and an angry crowd of more than 100 shouting and shaking their fists.
Supporters of Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr accused the Americans of firing mortars at the mosque.
Imam Ali was the Prophet Muhammad’s cousin and son-in-law and he is the most revered saint among Shiite Muslims.
The latest violence come after President Bush said in a nationally televised speech that the United States would stay in Iraq until it was democratic and a long-awaited US-British blueprint for a post-occupation Iraqi government was presented to the UN Security Council.
Residents described the fighting in Najaf as some of the fiercest since the eruption of fighting there last month.
Fighting raged after daybreak. Explosions and gunfire were heard around the city’s Revolution of 1920 Square and the cemetery, a warren of paths and tombs that offers numerous hiding places for rebels armed with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades.
Seven people were killed and five injured in Najaf today, said Seyed Kifah Shemal, an official at Hakim General Hospital.
Two people died and 14 were injured in overnight fighting in Kufa, said Riyadh Kadhem, a nurse at the Forat al-Awsat hospital in Kufa.
The toll among Iraqis could be higher because militiamen often avoid taking their casualties to hospitals, fearing arrest by American troops.
There were no reports of US casualties.
http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=2973093