BAGHDAD,
June 24 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – At least 93 Iraqis
and five US soldiers were killed and over 200 others injured in a
series of coordinated attacks and clashes in several Iraqi cities
Thursday, June 24.
Al-Jazeera
Satellite Channel put the number of killed at 93 while other reports
put it at around 75.
In
a series of car bomb blasts in police stations in the northern city of
Mosul, the Iraqi Health Ministry put the number of deaths at 44 people
and 216 wounded, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Fighting
in Al-Anbar province, where clashes erupted in Fallujah and Ramadi,
saw at least nine people killed and 27 others wounded. Fighting around
Baquba killed 13 and wounded 15, the ministry was quoted by Reuters as
saying.
The
US military also launched air strikes on the central city of Baquba,
likewise the scene of heavy fighting, firing laser-guided missiles, a
military official said. There was no immediate word of casualties in
the raids.
The
Iraqi fighters launched a pre-dawn assault on a US military patrol and
a police station in Baquba, according to the 1st Infantry Division and
an AFP correspondent.
"At
approximately 5:30 am (0130 GMT) ... anti-Iraqi forces attacked a 1st
Infantry Division patrol with small arms fire and rocket-propelled
grenades in the vicinity of the Mufrek Traffic Circle in Baquba,
killing one 1st Infantry Division Soldier and wounding three,"
Major Neal O'Brien told AFP.
O'Brien
said the city had been sealed off.
Medical
sources said fifteen Iraqis were killed, including 11 policemen, and
22 civilians were wounded.
"We
have received 15 dead bodies, of which 11 were policemen and the other
four were civilians," said Hussein Ali, an official in charge of
administration at the general hospital in Baquba, 60 kilometers (36
miles) northeast of Baghdad.
"In
addition, we have 22 people with bullet wounds and injuries from bomb
fragments," he said.
More
Attacks
In
Ramadi, the US military reported an attack on an agricultural center
in the city and possibly on a police station.
US
Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt told reporters in Baghdad that four
soldiers had been killed in the city.
He
said the servicemen were conducting operations there, and that they
had failed to check in with superiors at an appointed hour. He
declined further comment until the families of the dead could be
notified.
In
Mosul, four car bombs exploded near police stations in the northern
city. The US military said a US soldier and a private security guard
were killed in the string car bombings.
The
first car exploded at 9:05 am (0505 GMT) in front of the Wadi Hajar
police station in the south of the city, leaving "many killed and
wounded," said Colonel Mohammed Seddiq Al-Karkshi.
Seven
people, mainly policemen, were killed and 20 wounded in a second car
bomb attack Thursday less than half an hour later, a police officer
said.
"We
have seven dead and 20 wounded, many of them policemen," said
Lieutenant Mohammed Mohannad Abdul Karim.
Two
other stationsin the central Fathi district had also been hit, police
said, but there were no further details.
The
western sector of the city was deserted except for Iraqi fighters
posted on street corners and inside buildings.
The
fighting broke out after the dawn prayers when men, armed with assault
rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers, assaulted the police
station.
Two
dead policemen lay in the street as fighters gripped Kalashnikovs
behind the windows of buildings. A black flag fluttered behind them,
according to AFP.
As
anti-American sentiments, fuelled by finding no weapons of mass
destruction as the main justification for the invasion, are growing in
the oil-rich country, ordinary Iraqis accused their compatriots
working with the occupation forces as collaborators.
Renewed
Fallujah Clashes
Clashes
also broke out early Thursday between US forces and fighters outside
the resistance bastion of Fallujah, west of the capital, forcing
locals to flee from parts of the city.
"We
received order to close the highway because of heavy fighting," a
US marine said on the roadway.
There
was no immediate news on any casualties from the fighting.
In
April, Fallujah was the scene of some of the heaviest fighting since
last year's US-led invasion of Iraq as US forces killed more than 600
people in massive air raids of the densely-populated areas during the
offensive.
The
US military said Wednesday, June 23, that it killed 20 people in an
air strike. It claimed that the casualties were foreign fighters on a
suspected Zarqawi safehouse in Fallujah the previous day.
But
according to the local hospital and witnesses, the strike killed three
people - a local garage owner and his two sons - and wounded 10
others.