--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Permanent Mission of the People's Republic of China to the UN
Permanent Mission of the People's Republic of China to the United Nations Office at Geneva and other International Organizations in Switzerland
Foreign Affairs College
Fragile Cease-fire Holds in Fallujah

A fragile cease-fire held between Sunni insurgents and US Marines on Sunday in the besieged city of Fallujah, where Iraqis said more than 600 civilians were killed in the past week. Near Baghdad, gunmen shot down a US attack helicopter, killing two crewmembers.  

Also, the military suggested it is open to a negotiated solution in its showdown with a radical Shiite cleric in the south.

 

Most of the Iraqis killed in Fallujah in fighting that started last Monday were women, children and elderly, said the director of the city hospital, Rafie al-Issawi. A US Marine commander disputed that, saying most of the dead were probably insurgents.

 

Fallujah residents took advantage of the lull in fighting to bury their dead in two soccer fields. One of the fields had rows of freshly dug graves, some marked on headstones as children or with the names of women.

 

The Fallujah violence spilled over to the nearby western entrance of Baghdad, where gunmen shot down an American AH-64 Apache helicopter. As a team moved in to secure the bodies of the two dead crewmen, a large force of tanks and troops pushed down the highway outside the Iraqi capital, aiming to crush insurgents.

 

Gunmen have run rampant in the Abu Ghraib district west of Baghdad for three days, attacking fuel convoys, killing a US soldier and two American civilians and kidnapping another American.

 

The captors of Thomas Hamill, an American who works for a US contractor in Iraq, threatened to kill and burn him unless US troops end their assault on Fallujah, west of Baghdad, by 6 a.m. Sunday. The deadline passed with no word on Hamill's fate.

 

The Arab TV station Al-Arabiya reported that insurgents kidnapped seven Chinese north of Fallujah on Sunday evening, citing Chinese diplomatic sources. No further details were immediately available.

 

Insurgents who kidnapped other foreigners this week began releasing some captives. A Briton was freed, and other kidnappers said they were freeing eight captives of various nationalities. Other insurgents who kidnapped two Japanese men and a woman said Saturday they would free their captives within 24 hours, but they had not been freed by Sunday night.

 

The US military on Sunday reported 12 more US soldiers killed in fighting on Friday and Saturday -- half of them in Baghdad. The deaths brought to 59 the number of American soldier killed since the new fronts of violence erupted April 4. Nearly 900 Iraqis have been killed in the same period. At least 661 US soldiers have died in Iraq since the war began in March 2003.

 

Sporadic battles in Fallujah wounded two Marines, and the bodies of 11 Iraqis were brought to a mosque being used as a clinic. A Marine spokesman said troops responding to Iraqi fire killed "a significant number" of fighters. A Cobra helicopter fired rockets and missiles after it came under ground fire, he said.

 

But Fallujah was still the quietest it has been since the US offensive began.

 

Hundreds of Marine reinforcements moved in around Fallujah, joining 1,200 Marines and 900 Iraqis already there. The military has warned it may resume an all-out assault against Sunni insurgents if negotiations focused on extending the cease-fire and restoring police control of the city fall through.

 

US President Bush, attending an Easter Sunday service at a chapel at the US Army base Fort Hood, Texas, braced Americans for the possibility of more casualties in Iraq while saying the US-led mission is just.

 

"It was a tough week last week and my prayers and thoughts are with those who pay the ultimate price for our security," the president said.

 

But he said the United States was "open to suggestions" about resolving the siege, referring to negotiations between Iraqi politicians and Fallujah city officials that continued Sunday.

 

Governing Council members were holding discussions with followers of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose militia rose up in a bloody revolt this week against coalition troops and largely controls three southern cities, Karbala, Kufa and Najaf.

 

The south was relatively calm, as up to 1.5 million Shiite pilgrims marked al-Arbaeen, one of the holiest days of their religious calendar, in Karbala on Sunday, with al-Sadr militiamen and other gunmen keeping security in the streets.

 

US commanders have said they would delay any action against al-Sadr until after the ceremonies, which ended Sunday. But US officials for the first time suggested there were open to a nonmilitary solution to the confrontation.

 

US coalition spokesman Dan Senor would not comment on Iraqi talks with al-Sadr's followers but added, "I would say that our goal is to minimize bloodshed and to head off any sort of conflict."

 

"We don't see it as a necessary requirement that any military action has to occur in Najaf," Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt told reporters.

 

US troops retook the city of Kut from al-Sadr followers in the past three days, in the first major foray in months by the American military into southern Iraq, where US allies have security duties.

 

But military action to retake the other cities could require fighting near some of Shiite Islam's holiest shrines, raising the possibility of enflaming Shiite anger at the US-led occupation.

 

"There are many ways for the town of Najaf to come back under legitimate control of the Iraqi government, coalition provisions authority and that don't involve any fighting at all," Kimmitt said.

 

US-allied Iraqi leaders have increasingly expressed anger at the bloodshed in Iraq over the past week, saying the military has used excessive force.

 

Over a third of the city's 200,000 residents fled the city during the lull, Marines said. Fallujah hospital's al-Issawi said the number of Iraqi dead in the city was likely higher than the 600 recorded at the hospital and four main clinics in the city.

 

"We have reports of an unknown number of dead being buried in people's homes without coming to the clinics," he said.

 

Bodies were being buried at two soccer fields. At one of the fields, dubbed the "Graveyard of the Martyrs" by residents, an AP reporter saw rows of freshly dug graves with wooden planks for headstones over an area about 30 yards wide by more than 100 yards long.

 

Khalaf al-Jumaili, a volunteer helping bury bodies at the field, said more than 300 people had been interred there. Volunteers were seen carrying bodies in blankets and lowering them into graves while bystanders shouted, "Martyr, martyr!"

 

It was not known how many were buried at the other soccer field.

 

Asked about the report of 600 dead, Marine Lt. Col. Brennan Byrne said, "What I think you will find is 95 percent of those were military age males that were killed in the fighting."

 

"The Marines are trained to be precise in their firepower .... The fact that there are 600 goes back to the fact that the Marines are very good at what they do," he said.

 

At least five Marines have died in the Fallujah fighting.

 

The most serious break in Sunday's peace came when a sniper opened fire on US patrol, wounding two Marines, commanders said. In the ensuing gunbattle, at least one insurgent was killed.

 

"At the moment we're just trying to get the cease-fire in place," L. Paul Bremer, the top US civilian administrator in Iraq, said Sunday on ABC's "This Week." "What were trying to do is simply get the forces to stop firing."

 

During the lull, Marines distributed food to residents. At least three convoys of food and medicine were brought into the mostly Sunni city, including one organized by Shiite leaders in Baghdad as a sign of unity.

 

(China Daily April 12, 2004)

Iraqis Start Hostage-taking as New Policy for Resistance
US Apache Copter Shot down West of Baghdad
US Troops in Bloody Battles on Saddam Anniversary
Print This Page
|
Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
主站蜘蛛池模板: 日韩乱码人妻无码中文字幕| 波多野结衣一区在线观看| 日本韩国欧美在线观看| 亚洲日本一区二区三区在线 | 欧美影院在线观看| 人妻久久久一区二区三区| 美女开嫩苞视频在线播放| 国产精品成人99久久久久| JIZZJIZZ亚洲日本少妇| 小魔女娇嫩的菊蕾| 中文字幕人妻三级中文无码视频| 日本边添边摸边做边爱喷水| 亚拍精品一区二区三区| 欧美人与牲动交xxxx| 亚洲欧美日韩综合久久| 激情综合色五月丁香六月欧美| 国产在线短视频| 日本亚洲精品色婷婷在线影院 | 乱小说欧美综合| 欧美―第一页―浮力影院| 免费观看性生交大片人| 精品香蕉久久久午夜福利| 国产一二三在线观看| 蜜桃臀无码内射一区二区三区 | 亚洲国产小视频| 欧美日韩亚洲视频 | 高清日本撒尿xxxx| 天天夜碰日日摸日日澡| 一区三区三区不卡| 日韩在线播放全免费| 亚洲AV香蕉一区区二区三区 | 最新在线中文字幕| 亚洲av永久综合在线观看尤物| 欧美亚洲国产片在线观看| 亚洲日韩中文字幕在线播放| 欧美裸体xxxx极品少妇| 亚洲综合图片网| 色妞WW精品视频7777| 国产精品亚洲欧美一区麻豆| 4hc44四虎www在线影院男同| 国产精品视频区|