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Mortar Blast Kills 27 in Iraq
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Puck
The Texan


Joined: 05 Jan 2004
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PostThu Aug 26, 2004 7:37 am    Mortar Blast Kills 27 in Iraq

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Mortar Blast Kills 27 in Iraq

Thursday, August 26, 2004



NAJAF, Iraq � A mortar attack in Najaf killed 27 people and wounded another 63 on Thursday just hours before Iraq's top Shiite cleric arrived in the holy city in an attempt to end three weeks of fighting.

The barrage slammed into a mosque filled with Iraqis preparing to march on Najaf (search).

Meanwhile, a ceasefire is technically underway in the city while the Grand Ayatollah Ali Husseini al-Sistani (search) holds talks with firebrand cleric Muqtada al-Sadr (search), who has been at a standoff with U.S. and Iraqi forces for weeks in the city.

Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi (search) called for the ceasefire beginning at 3 p.m. local time [7 a.m. EDT] for 24 hours. He said he welcomes al-Sistani, and said that according to al-Sadr aides, the anti-American cleric will follow the solutions suggested by al-Sistani.

The U.S. military in Najaf has ordered an operational pause to honor the ceasefire. Al-Sistani has called for al-Sadr and his Mahdi Army militia to leave the Imam Ali Shrine, where they have been holed up, and offered them amnesty if they do. He also said this is the last call for peace.

Meanwhile, in Kufa, Najaf's twin city, unidentified gunmen opened fire from an Iraqi National Guard base on thousands of Shiite Muslim marchers heading to Najaf, killing at least three and wounding 46, witnesses said.

Leading up to the ceasefire, fierce clashes continued Thursday in Najaf with U.S. warplanes bombing suspected positions of al-Sadr's militia and explosions booming across the city.

Al-Sistani, 75, returned to Iraq on Wednesday from a trip to London. The cleric wields enormous influence among Shiite Iraqis and his return could play a crucial role in stabilizing the Najaf crisis, which has worsened in his absence.

Najaf Gov. Adnan al-Zurufi declared a 24 hour cease-fire from the time al-Sistani arrives in Najaf to give the militants a chance to decide whether to accept the cleric's peace plan.

"Immediately after that, the operation will start again if the militia disagree on what Ayatollah al-Sistani said," he said.

He also said that Iraqi and U.S. forces would temporarily pull back from positions near the revered Imam Ali Shrine to allow for peace efforts.

Al-Sistani's aides said thousands of chanting supporters ran out to greet the convoy as it passed through the town of Samawah.

"It seems that there are huge crowds joining the march in every city we pass by," al-Khafaf said. The convoy was joined by at least a thousand cars, apparently filled with Shiite supporters heeding a call al-Sistani's aides made a day earlier to march on Najaf to stop the violence.

Al-Sistani had called for Iraqis to march to Najaf on Thursday, but al-Khafaf said the demonstrators should stop on the edge of the holy city and wait for al-Sistani to arrive and give them instructions before entering.

"We were gathering outside and inside the mosque preparing to head to Najaf when two mortar shells landed, one inside the mosque and the other on the main gate," said Hani Hashem, bringing an injured friend to the hospital. "This is a criminal act. We just wanted to launch a peaceful demonstration."

Fighting in Kufa

In Kufa, Hussam al-Husseini, an al-Sadr aide, said one mortar shell hit the mosque compound itself and two others hit near the mosque gates. Others gave conflicting accounts of the number of explosions.

Mohammed Abdul Kadhim, an official at Furat al-Awsat hospital in Kufa, said 27 people were killed and 63 injured. The morgue overflowed with bodies, and more than a dozen corpses had to be stored in the hospital's garden.

Outside the hospital's gate, crowds of angry people gathered, shouting "God is great!"

Al-Sadr has regularly delivered a sermon during Friday prayers at the Kufa mosque.

After the attack, thousands of demonstrators loyal to al-Sadr marched on nearby Najaf but came under fire from a base between the two cities housing Iraqi national guardsmen and U.S. troops, witnesses said.

The marchers scattered when the gunfire broke out. The day before, gunfire from the same base killed eight people and wounded 56 others who were taking part in what appeared to be a peaceful demonstration supporting al-Sadr.

Another mortar attack in Kufa on Wednesday, apparently targeting a police checkpoint, killed two civilians, including an 8-year-old boy.

Al-Sadr's aide, al-Husseini, said another mosque in Kufa had also been hit by mortar rounds on Thursday, but it was unclear whether casualties were reported.

He blamed the mortar attack on the main mosque on American forces backing Iraqi troops in the city, but a U.S. military spokesman denied that. "We held the interim government responsible for this bombing. We hold it responsible for this bloodshed," al-Husseini said.

The U.S. military issued a statement saying it does not target holy sites not did it have any weapons systems near the Kufa mosque overnight.

"We have all seen the militia members' wild, undisciplined fire in recent news footage, and there is no doubt that this poses a great danger to the citizens and holy sites in Najaf and Kufa," the statement said.

Earlier this week, U.S. forces released photos purportedly showing a militant mortar system outside the Imam Ali Shrine in Najaf and accused the militants of launching a rocket from inside the shrine compound that fell short and exploded just outside the holy site.

Al-Sistani � who wields enormous influence among Shiites � is calling for Najaf and Kufa to be declared weapons-free cities, for all foreign forces to withdraw from Najaf and leave security to the police and for the Iraqi government to compensate those harmed by the fighting here.

In other violence, saboteurs attacked about 20 oil pipelines in southern Iraq late Wednesday, reducing exports from the key oil producing region by at least one third, an official with the state-run South Oil Co. said Thursday on condition of anonymity.

A militant group also said Wednesday it had kidnapped Maj. Gen. Salah Hassan Lami, the brother-in-law of Iraqi Defense Minister Hazem Shaalan, and demanded the end of all military operations here, according to a video obtained by Al-Jazeera television.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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