From the Los Angeles Times
Iraq civilians reportedly among Sadr City dead
The U.S. Army says militants were, but photos
show a child's body being pulled from the rubble.
By Tina Susman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
4:58 PM PDT, April 29, 2008
BAGHDAD —
The U.S. Army said they were militants. Sadr City residents said at
least some were civilians, and photographs showed the dust-covered body
of at least one child being pulled from a mountain of rubble after
Tuesday's fighting.
Whatever the facts, at least 28 people were dead after the four-hour
battle, the latest killed in a showdown between U.S. and Iraqi forces
and Shiite Muslim militiamen over recent weeks.
Based on the photographs, it appeared that at least one of the dead was
a civilian. In its captions, the Associated Press identified the boy in
the bloodied shorts being carried from the ruins of a house as
2-year-old Ali Hussein.
The brother-in-law of an Iraqi journalist who works with The Times also
was reported killed. The victim recently had moved his immediate family
out of the neighborhood because of the fighting.
The journalist, reached by phone Tuesday night, said he was at the
funeral and could not speak.
The destruction and death toll underscored the intensity of fighting in
Sadr City, where U.S. forces are pursuing militants who often operate
from the narrow alleyways and crowded residential sectors of the
sprawling Shiite stronghold. Clashes have occurred there nearly every
day since the end of March, when an Iraqi military crackdown on Shiite
militias sparked an uprising by fighters loyal to cleric Muqtada Sadr.
With many of Sadr City's main roads peppered with roadside bombs and
its side streets too narrow for U.S. tanks or other heavy vehicles to
navigate, U.S. forces often call in airstrikes or use guided rockets to
hit their targets.
Residents say civilians often are caught in the chaos.
The military says it does everything it can to avoid this. In a
statement Tuesday, a military spokesman responded angrily to the
accusations that troops had killed civilians in the latest battle.
"The rockets struck militants firing from buildings, alleyways and
rooftops," Lt. Col. Steven Stover wrote in an e-mailed response to
questions. "We are NOT targeting law-abiding civilians. Those targeted
were firing weapons at U.S. soldiers."
Stover said the clashes began in the late morning as troops evacuating
a U.S. soldier wounded by small-arms fire came under attack. Two bombs,
followed by small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenade blasts,
targeted the vehicle trying to get the wounded man to safety, Stover
said.
A third bomb hit another vehicle. U.S. forces responded with guided
rockets launched from the ground. Stover denied residents' claims that
helicopters fired on them from the air.
He said six Americans were injured in the fighting, but their injuries
weren't life-threatening.
Abu Ahmed, a resident of Sector 10, where the violence occurred, said
two rockets hit the neighborhood, where many of the small homes are
crowded with three or four families living together.
He said the first rocket demolished several homes in the middle of a
block.
"When some people rushed to evacuate the people and the families
who were killed or injured, they were attacked by another rocket," Abu
Ahmed said. He said a friend named Sameer and several of his relatives
were among the dead.
Violence also rocked Diyala province, a Sunni Muslim stronghold north
of Baghdad. Police said a female suicide bomber killed one person and
injured five in the village of Mukhisa. The victims were members of the
local Sons of Iraq group, men who have volunteered to work alongside
U.S. and Iraqi forces to fight insurgents.
In Baghdad, assassins killed Dhia Jodi Jaber, the director general of
the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs. Some reports said he was
shot, but others said a roadside bomb blast hit his motorcade.
The trial for one of the best known members of Saddam Hussein's inner
circle, former Deputy Prime Minister Tarik Aziz, got underway in
Baghdad but was quickly adjourned until May 20. He is appearing before
a special tribunal created to handle cases involving members of
Hussein's ousted regime.
Aziz, 72, whose white hair and huge glasses made him instantly
recognizable, is accused of ordering the executions of 42 merchants
accused of driving up prices for essential goods by violating state
price controls in 1992. He could face the death penalty if convicted.
He rose to prominence before the 1991 Persian Gulf War when, as
Hussein's foreign minister, he became the chief negotiator and public
face of the Iraqi government.
He has been in custody since April 2003.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times