BAGHDAD,
October 2 (IslamOnline.net) – Hundreds of Iraqi families, mostly
women and children, lined up at the main entrances of Samarra, 125
kilometers north of Baghdad, in a desperate attempt to escape the
gates of hell broken loose by the American occupation forces.
"The
US forces are still barring families from leaving Samarra without
giving any justification," Oday Al-Samrraei told IslamOnline.net.
Samrraei,
who managed to flee the city two days earlier, dismissed the American
measure a "collective punishment", accusing the occupation
forces of "humiliating Iraqi families."
The
US army said 125 "guerrillas" were killed and 88 captured
during the onslaught on Samarra.
A
massive force of 3,000 American troops and 2,000 Iraqi National
guardsmen had stormed the city on Thursday, September 30, allegedly to
regain control before the general elections, scheduled for January.
Ambulances
Barred
"The
occupation forces are even preventing the families from burying their
dead or evacuating wounded people scattered across the city streets,
" Samrraei lamented.
Many
bodies were strewn in the streets but could not be collected for fear
of the American snipers, residents said.
"Dead
bodies and injured people are everywhere in the city and when we tried
to evacuate them, the Americans fired at us," one ambulance
driver told AP Television News.
"Later
on they told us than we can evacuate only injured women and children
and we are not allowed to pick up injured men."
Meanwhile,
the Iraqi Red Crescent has set up more than twenty tents on the
outskirts of the city to help the wounded, barred by the US from
leaving.
Iraqi
medical sources accused the American forces of denying ambulances
access into the city.
And
doctors inside Samrra’s only hospital complained of sever blood and
medicine shortage to help the tens of people rushed in.
They
said at least 50 bodies have been brought to the hospital since the
unleashing of the American onslaught.
Intermittent
Fighting
On
the ground, the Iraqi government and the US occupation forces claimed
Saturday control over most areas in Samarra except for some pockets of
resistance.
"Iraqi
national guardsmen, assisted by the multinational forces, have taken
control of police stations in Samarra and several other areas,"
Interior Ministry spokesman Sabah Kazem told IslamOnline.net.
Earlier,
Iraqi Interior Minister Falah al-Naqib told reporters inside Samarra
city hall they have "cleansed the city of all the bad guys and
terrorists."
However,
witnesses told IOL that the eastern parts of the city saw intermittent
fighting between the American forces and the residents.
One
resident, Qahtan Al-Douri, spoke of "fierce resistance"
inside the city.
Other
sources told IOL that the American forces cordoned off the city from
the four corners, while warplanes and artillery continued to bombard
residential areas.
In
General, the streets of Samarra were deserted while water and power
were cut off in several areas.
Government
Blamed
The
Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), Iraq’s top Sunni religious
authority, heaped blame on the interim government for the bloodshed in
Samarra.
"We
blame the government for the injustices and aggressions suffered by
the inhabitants of Samarra," the AMS said in a statement.
"The
vicious campaign carried out by the occupying forces, and regrettably
blessed by the interim government, is the last in a series of
aggressions against the city under the pretext of rebuilding
security."
The
AMS also stressed that "resorting to iron and fire" to set
the scene of the general elections remains a "flawed
method."
The
interim government had vowed to crush all "insurgent-held
enclaves" in time for the nationwide elections.