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U.S. forces opened fire at the crowd, killing and wounding dozens
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MOSUL,
Iraq, April 15 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - At least 10
Iraqi people were shot dead and scores wounded Tuesday, April 15, in
the northern Iraqi town of Mosul, a hospital doctor said, with
witnesses claiming U.S. troops opened fire after a crowd turned
against an American-installed local governor.
"There
are perhaps 100 wounded and 10 to 12 dead" following the shooting
near the local government offices in a central square, Dr. Ayad
al-Ramadhani said at the emergency department of the city hospital,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Three
witnesses questioned by AFP and casualties who spoke to hospital staff
said U.S. troops had fired on the crowd, which was becoming
increasingly hostile towards the new governor, Mashaan al-Juburi, as
he was making a pro-U.S. speech.
An
AFP journalist saw a wrecked car in the square and ambulances ferrying
wounded people to hospital, while a U.S. aircraft flew over the
northern city at low altitude.
U.S. (occupation) forces in Mosul refused to comment to AFP.
At
U.S. Central Command's war headquarters in Qatar, Brigadier General
Vincent Brooks told a press briefing he had seen no military reports
of the incident and could not confirm it.
"We
were at the market place near the government building, where Juburi
was making a speech," said Marwan Mohammed, 50. "He said
everything would be restored, water, electricity, and that democracy
was the Americans.
"As
for the Americans, they were going through the crowd with their flag.
They placed themselves between the civilians and the building.
"The
people moved toward the government building, the children threw
stones, the Americans started firing. Then they prevented the people
from recovering the bodies," he told AFP.
At
the hospital, where angry relatives of the dead and wounded voiced
hatred of Americans and Westerners, a doctor gave a similar account
from patients.
“Juburi
said the people must cooperate with the United States. The crowd
called him a liar, and tempers rose as he continued to talk. They
threw objects at him, overturned his car which exploded," said
Dr. Said Altah.
"The
wounded said Juburi asked the Americans to fire," he said.
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Marines preventing a reporter from entering Palestine Hotel |
Ayad
Hassun, 37, another witness, said that the trouble broke out after the
crowd interrupted Juburi's speech with cries of, "There is no God
but God and Mohammed is his prophet."
"You
are with Saddam's Fedayeen," retorted Juburi, to which the crowd
chanted that, "The only democracy is to make the Americans
leave".
He
explained that 20 U.S. soldiers escorted Juburi, an opposition leader
installed as Mosul governor, back into the building as the situation
ran out of control with the crowd's protests growing louder.
"They
(the soldiers) climbed on top of the building and first fired at a
building near the crowd, with the glass falling on the civilians.
People started to throw stones, then the Americans fired at
them," Hassun said.
"Dozens
of people fell," said the witness, whose own shirt was
blood-stained.
According
to a third witness, Abdulrahman Ali, a 49-year-old laborer, the
American soldiers opened fire when they saw the crowd running at the
government building.
A
few hours after the incident, the building was guarded by U.S. troops
as an angry crowd was kept 100 meters (yards) away.
In
an interview Monday, Juburi said a deal with local Arab tribal chiefs
saw most of Saddam Hussein's forces peacefully put down their arms and
disband in Mosul, which fell to U.S. control last Friday.
Juburi,
head of the Damascus-based Patriotic Iraqi Party, said he had
regularly addressed Mosul's residents over radio and television before
entering the mostly Arab city with Kurdish forces.
"Every
day, I said I would threaten no one's security, whether they were a
member of the Baath Party, intelligence, police or supporters of
Saddam. Mosul residents trust my family," he said.
Marines
& Media At Loggerheads
Meanwhile,
U.S. hopes of winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people were
being sorely tested Tuesday by persistent protests and an
international press corps increasingly frustrated by the lack of
information on the reconstruction effort.
That
frustration verged on hostility when U.S. forces hampered the media
from covering the third straight day of anti-American protests by
between 200 and 300 Iraqis outside Baghdad's Palestine Hotel where
U.S. operations are housed.