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Aid
convoys came under fire on the way to Fallujah
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Additional
Reporting By Aws Al-Sharqy & Samir Haddad, IOL Correspondents
BAGHDAD,
April 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The U.S. soldiers
opened fire on aid convoys taking relief supplies to Fallujah, sealed
off by occupation forces for the fourth consecutive day, eyewitnesses
said.
The
convoys, carrying foodstuffs and medicine, were forced to stop in
Ramadi to the west of Baghdad, eyewitnesses told IslamOnline.net.
Troops
in armored vehicles attempted to stop the convoy of cars and
pedestrians from reaching the western town where U.S. marines have met
ferocious resistance in a two-day-old offensive.
But
the U.S. contingents were overwhelmed as residents of villages west of
the capital came to the convoy's assistance, hurling insults and
stones at the beleaguered troops, Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Two
U.S. Humvees attempted to stop the marchers but were forced to drive
off as residents joined the marchers.
U.S.
troops armed with machine guns and backed up by armor again blocked
the highway further west, but were forced to let the Iraqis past as
they came under a hail of stones.
The
cross-community demonstration of support for Fallujah had been
organized by Baghdad Sunni and Shiite scholars amid reports that the
death toll in the town had reached 105 since Tuesday evening.
“No
Sunnis, no Shiites, yes for Islamic unity,” the marchers chanted.
“We are Sunni and Shiite brothers and will never sell our
country”.
Sunni
mosques in Baghdad called for donations of blood and humanitarian aid
to the Fallujah inhabitants, drawing response form thousands of people
– all sharing fury over continued U.S. military occupation of the
country.
The
incident came one day after International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) urged U.S. troops to allow unfettered access to the city's
hospital.
“Access
to (Fallujah's) general hospital must be open and the wounded and the
sick must be helped to reach it,” ICRC spokeswoman Nada Dumani was
quoted by Agence France-Presse (AFP) as saying.
The
only hospital in the city was shelled Monday, April 5, by U.S.
helicopters. Doctors said the situation is extremely serious as some
of the injured have bled to death.
Iraqi
casualties were “mostly women and children”, as the makeshift
hospital could not receive any more victims, medical sources in the
town said.
“We
are treating the wounded and then asking them to leave,” one doctor
said.
F16s
Continue To Shell Fallujah
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A
U.S.
soldier pulls an injured comrade away from a burning tank in
Falluja
,
Iraq
|
F16
fighter jets shelled the densely-populated areas of the town on
Wednesday, leaving 45 inhabitants dead and 65 others injured for one
day.
Corpses
littered the streets of Fallujah on Thursday, as the U.S. marines met
ferocious resistance in the town which their commander compared to the
Vietnam war.
Flies
buzzed on the lips of the corpse of a 40-year-old Iraqi with a
mustache and receding black hairline. Marines shot him in the neck
when he allegedly fired a rocket-propelled grenade at them across the
industrial wasteland of garages, factories and metal shops.
Turbulence
continued in other areas in the conflictive country, as U.S. forces
kept their raids.
The
ghastly raids on Fallujah came as at least 40 Iraqis were killed and
dozens others injured in a separate U.S. military attacks on Ramadi,
110km west of Baghdad.
Eight
Iraqis were killed and 12 others injured Wednesday by the U.S. forces
during a demonstration west of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk to
protest the siege on Fallujah.
Continued
Fighting
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Iraqi
fighters stand in defense of Fallujah
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In
the meantime, the U.S. F16s are reported to keep shelling Fallujah,
leaving several casualties.
Shiite
leader Moqtada Sadr's militia also vowed to resume combat against
occupation troops.
“We
had given orders for calm because we are peaceful people, and there
were negotiations to calm the situation,” said Amer al-Husseini, a
spokesman for Sadr in Baghdad's Shiite city of Sadr City.
“But
after they bombarded our headquarters and prayer room with Apache
helicopters and tanks, we are ready to resume combat until the last
drop of our blood,” he told reporters.
The
U.S. forces admitted one Marine was killed in fighting in Fallujah on
Thursday, bringing the death toll of Marine casualties from this
week's clashes in the town to four. There were no immediate details on
how the soldier was killed.
A
total of 10 Marines are known to have been wounded since they launched
a siege of Fallujah early Monday. The Marines have not given a full
casualty count.
Sadr's
militia said Thursday it was holding Spanish prisoners and possibly an
American, but Spanish officials quickly denied any of their troops had
been seized.
There
was no immediate U.S. reaction to the claim by Sadr's militia, who
said they planned to swap the hostages for one of their Najaf-based
leaders, Mustafa al-Yaacubi, detained by U.S, forces Saturday 4.
The
militia threatened to up the ante with an ultimatum Thursday to
occupation forces to quit the holy city of Karbala where a major
religious celebration was scheduled this weekend.
Attack
A
U.S. convoy of two vehicles was seen in flames about 20km west of
Baghdad on Thursday morning. The U.S military has not confirmed the
incident, which came hours after U.S. troops fought intense street
battles in the capital.
Militiamen
loyal to Sadr are said to be taking control of the city of Karbala.
They also patrol the holy cities of Kut and Najaf.
U.S.
Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld said his troops would stay away
from the holy Shiite city of Najaf.
He
said U.S.-led forces had decided to stay away from Najaf because of an
upcoming Muslim pilgrimage to the city and because of Sadr's militia
forces.
Shiite
scholars have warned
the U.S. troops of acting “irrationally” after up to 52 Iraqi
protesters were killed on Sunday, April 4, in the worst confrontations
between Iraq’s Shiite majority and the U.S.-led occupation troops
sine the start of the invasion one year ago.
The
protesters were denouncing the crushing of two fellowmen by a U.S.
tank on Saturday, April 3, the arrest of Sadr’s top assistant Sheikh
Al-Yaqoubi and a ban on Al-Hawza newspaper, Sadr’s
mouthpiece.