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Assassination, Attacks Overshadow Iraq
Political Talks
25.3.2005
By Elizabeth Piper
BAGHDAD (Reuters) -
Insurgents assassinated a senior Iraqi army commander
Friday and staged two suicide car bombings, killing 15
people, in violence that politicians fear may deepen
if a new government is not formed soon.
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Almost
two months after an election, politicians from
Iraq's main parties, the Shi'ite alliance and the
Kurds, pursued talks to form a government but were
struggling over top cabinet posts.
Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih, a main Kurdish
negotiator, said all sides were concerned about the
relentless violence and that only a unity government
including all Iraq's ethnic and religious groups
could tackle terrorism.
Gunmen shot dead Major-General Suleiman Mohammad,
who commanded a National Guard division in southern
Iraq, in the New Baghdad district of the capital,
wounding two of his sons, police said. Some said he
was attacked leaving a wake, but it was not clear
why the Basra-based general was in Baghdad.
American and Iraqi officers said two suicide car
bomb attacks killed at least 15 people and wounded
23.
In an attack in Iskandariya, in a lawless area just
south of Baghdad, a bomber blew up his car beside an
Iraqi army convoy, killing four soldiers and
wounding nine troops and civilians, two seriously,
local police said.
A suicide bomber blew up his car at a checkpoint in
the western city of Ramadi Thursday, killing 11
Iraqi commandos and wounding nine police, two U.S.
soldiers and three civilians, the U.S. military
said.
And in another violent assault, five women, four of
whom worked at a U.S. military base, were found dead
in a car in Baghdad. Those working for U.S. forces,
including cooks, laundry staff and translators, are
frequently targeted by insurgents.
The Islamic Army in Iraq said it was behind the
Ramadi suicide bomb attack, according to an Internet
statement.
"A martyrdom-seeker of the Army broke through the
first barrier set up by the American enemy and the
pagan (National) Guard ... and the car exploded as
it neared the second barrier," the insurgent group
said in the statement.
TALKS STUMBLE ON
Iraqi officials said talks on forming the new
government, whose overwhelming priority will be
tackling the country's relentless insurgency, were
moving forward, albeit slowly.
Politicians were now focused on trying to resolve
differences over who would take the main government
portfolios.
"There is a justified point of view that says the
political process is taking a long time but at the
same time we don't want to be in a hurry at the
expense of this country's future," Salih told
Reuters.
"We have big security and economy problems and we
are looking for total national unity.
"The main challenge for us is to build a country
that can face terrorism and also the economic
challenges," he said.
He said parliament, which many officials had hoped
would meet Saturday, would not assemble before
Monday when it would only be able to name the
speaker and his deputies.
Earlier the talks faltered over Kurdish demands to
expand their territory in northern Iraq and over
their peshmerga militia, which other parties want to
see folded into the Iraqi army. The Kurds want them
to remain separate.
Officials say those issues are no longer problems
but what exactly has been agreed is not yet clear.
Thursday, the peshmerga and local police engaged in
a gunbattle in northern Iraq, highlighting the deep
division and suspicion between the two sides.
At least five policemen and two security guards were
killed in the fight near the town of Rabia after
peshmerga fighters stormed a grain silo building
believing the guards there were behind a roadside
bomb attack that hit their convoy.
Lieutenant-Colonel Yahia Hamid said the peshmerga
had shot guards at the silo and then detained all
inside. He arrived with other police to end the
incident, but the peshmerga had attacked the new
arrivals.
"I identified myself but the peshmerga wouldn't
listen and started screaming at us and then gunfire
broke out," he said
Reuters 2005
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