US troops kill pro-Saddam protesters
Ulama groups say troops opened fire indiscriminately on crowd
Four Iraqis were killed in a Sunni district of Baghdad earlier this
week during an exchange of fire with US troops who tried to quell a
pro-Saddam demonstration, US and Iraqi sources have said.
A number of American soldiers were also wounded in the 15 December
incident, a senior US officer said on Saturday without giving an exact
figure.
"US troops opened fire indiscriminately on a spontaneous
demonstration" staged in the Adhamiyeh neighbourhood of northern
Baghdad in reaction to the announcement of the capture of Saddam
Hussein, said an official from the Association of Muslim Ulama, which
groups Sunni religious scholars.
"Four protesters were killed and others were injured," said Shaikh Abd
al-Salam al-Kubaissi.
Burials
Black banners carrying the names of the four victims were strung
outside a mosque in Adhamiyeh on Saturday.
The four - Uthman al-Nuaiman, Umar Abd al-Wahhab, Bilal Hindawi and
Usama al-Mashhadani - were "felled by US bullets on 15 December," the
banners said.
Witnesses had said on the day of the demonstration that the protest
turned into a clash with police during which two police stations were
attacked and security men opened fire to disperse the protesters.
Deaths confirmed
Brigadier General Mark Hertling, assistant division commander in the
1st Armored Division deployed in Baghdad, confirmed that "four
(people) were killed, seven wounded and 23 captured" during Monday's
incident.
"A number of American soldiers were wounded" when "shots were
exchanged," he said, adding that pro-Saddam demonstrations are
"outlawed."
The ousted Iraqi leader, who was captured by US forces on 13 December,
enjoys support in the Adhamiyeh district, where he made his last
appearance on 9 April when Baghdad fell to US-led forces.
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