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Iraqi people looting a reported government building in Baghdad
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BAGHDAD,
April 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – With Arab and
foreign TV channels showing footage of reported looting of government
buildings and U.N. office in Baghdad, Britain said Wednesday, April 9,
that Iraq's command and control structure appears to have broken down
but admitted resistance to advancing U.S. troops were still quite
fierce.
"Clearly
this is a very fast moving situation and therefore inevitably anything
we say has the risk of being overtaken by events," a spokesman
for British Prime Minister Tony Blair said.
"But
I think the most compelling evidence of the fast-moving situation is
the view that command and control in Baghdad appears to have
disintegrated."
"We
need to be careful and cautious about getting ahead of ourselves
because there is localized paramilitary resistance and because command
and control has broken down," he warned. "It could be
stubborn and fierce."
"But
the (television) pictures tell their own story. And the story they
tell is not just progress militarily -- which is very welcome and we
pay tribute to the troops -- but also the very real welcome local
people are giving that progress," the spokesman claimed.
There
was no immediate Iraqi official comment on the reported looting, the
security situation inside the capital or the status of the regime.
Agence
France-Presse (AFP) said young Iraqis attempted to hotwire the
abandoned white Mercedes of the irrigation minister amid widespread
looting in the Iraqi capital.
A
group of about 15 to 20 men were working to start the engine under the
lifted hood of the luxury car while another sat ready in the driver's
seat, said an AFP correspondent.
The
minister, Rassul Abd al-Hussein Sawadi, was nowhere in sight.
Earlier
in the day, citizens rampaged through both the irrigation and interior
ministries in the north of the capital, taking anything they could
carry, said the correspondent.
People
also broke into shops and homes in Saddam City, a Shiite Muslim
bastion in the northeast of the capital, stealing furniture, food,
electrical equipment and carpets, he added.
U.S.
forces had pushed through broad swathes of Baghdad earlier on
Wednesday with Iraqi gunmen reportedly offering sporadic resistance.
American
troops, backed by military vehicles were seen at Saddam City, in the
northeast of the capital.
Iraqi
Fighters Stand Grounds
Groups
of fighters loyal to Saddam Hussein made a last stand Wednesday
morning on a key bridge in Baghdad.
Dozens
of Iraqi and Arab fighters in civilian clothing took up position
behind buildings or sandbagged positions with the aim of stopping
American tanks crossing Al-Jumhurya bridge to the eastern bank of the
city.
The
slight rise in the center of the bridge prevented them from seeing the
western bank clearly.
"Baghdad
has not fallen and will never fall," said Mohammed al-Dahruj, a
24-year-old Syrian who volunteered to fight U.S.-led forces in Iraq.
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"We fight to defend our homeland and will stand firm whatever the price because we are ready to sacrifice our lives for Iraq," said one Iraqi fighter
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Armed
like his brothers-in-arms with a Kalashnikov assault rifle and
hand-held rocket launchers, he stressed that U.S. forces were
"encircled and their supplies cut off."
"The
enemy cannot budge. We feel stronger than the Americans despite their
military superiority because, contrary to them, we defend a
cause."
Khalid,
a member of Saddam Fedayeen, was equally as defiant. "We love
death as they (the Americans) love life," he said.
"We
fight to defend our homeland and will stand firm whatever the price
because we are ready to sacrifice our lives for Iraq."
According
to Khalid, "no tank has crossed from the other bank and, thanks
to God, they will never cross."
On
the other side of the Tigris, one American tank deployed not far from
Saddam's main Republican Palace advanced without problem and fired its
cannon at a blockhouse Saddam had built in the area as a symbolic
gesture of his power.
One
retired soldier told AFP: "We can resist. We're not hungry
because the trade ministry gave us six months of food rations."
Further
north, three Iraqi tanks and troop transporters were deployed in Aden
square, a seemingly derisory force in light of the invading
coalition's massive military might.
Fighting
had flared up on Wednesday morning around the presidential palace
where two U.S. tanks still held a key bridge over the Tigris river.
The
Abrams tanks opened fire, artillery pounded out and automatic weapons
crackled as U.S. forces moved to counter resistance from an Iraqi
position blocking the eastern exit of the Al-Jumhuriya bridge.
Smoke
billowed across the area overflown intermittently by coalition
warplanes in support of ground forces.
Iraqi
anti-aircraft fire has been seldom heard in recent days as U.S. forces
have blasted their way to President Saddam Hussein's Republican
Palace.
The
cracks and booms of battle began around 07:00 (0300 GMT) after a
relatively quiet night and continued sporadically for more than two
hours.
Intense
shooting was also heard from the south of the capital as U.S. troops
sought to tighten their grip on Iraq.
The
BBC's Andrew Gilligan in Baghdad says American troops were
encountering little Iraqi resistance.
According
to the BBC News Online, thousands of Marines early on Wednesday moved
block by block through Saddam City, an urban sprawl in northeast
Baghdad.
A
U.S. spokesman said a whole armored brigade was now in Baghdad, adding
they intend to stay there.