综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

  Home>News Center>World
         
 

Iraqi peace mission snubbed by rebel cleric
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-08-18 10:49

Radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on Tuesday refused to meet an Iraqi peace delegation because of "American aggression" as U.S. troops pounded militia positions in Najaf near the country's holiest Islamic sites.

The failure to hold face-to-face talks raises the possibility of a U.S.-led offensive to crush Sadr's Mehdi Army in the city, scene of 13 days of fierce fighting that has killed hundreds.

Braving U.S. bombardment and militia sniper fire, the group of eight political and religious leaders drove to al-Sadr's office seeking to end a rebellion in the holy city and other parts of Iraq.


A militiaman loyal to Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada Sadr takes position as a car burns in the southern Iraqi city of Basra after three British civilian vehicles were hit by a roadside bomb, causing no casualties. [AP Photo]

A Sadr aide told reporters accompanying the delegation that Sadr refused to meet them "because of continued aggression by the Americans."

Another aide in Baghdad, Sheikh Mahmoud al-Soudani, said: "He declined to meet them due to security reasons and heavy shelling in Najaf."

The delegation had met Sadr's top aides and waited for the young cleric for three hours at the city's holiest shrine, the Imam Ali Mosque, where many of Sadr's militiamen are holed up.

Sadr's top aide Sheikh Ali Smeisim, who met with the delegation, tried to soften the impact of Sadr's failure to show up.


An Iraqi girl, carried by her uncle, grieves after losing her mother and sister during clashes between U.S. forces and militiamen royal to radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in the eastern Baghdad's suburb of al-Sadr August 17, 2004. Fierce clashes erupted in Sadr City late August 16, 2004, following an afternoon of battles after militia exploded a bomb under a U.S. tank.  [Reuters]


"What we heard (from the delegation) contains positive indications. We are willing to discuss them," he said. He had told the delegation that Sadr was at a "secret location" and would come if the U.S. forces eased its noose around the shrines.

There were chaotic scenes when the delegation arrived inside the Imam Ali shrine.

More than 1,000 young men shouted, beat their chests, raised their fists in the air and chanted "long live Moqtada." Explosions and gunfire from the nearby vast cemetery could be heard.

After the snub the group drove to the governor's headquarters as fighting raged in the cemetery, where U.S. gunship helicopters fired on rebels who responded by firing mortars and machine guns at U.S. and Iraqi government forces. Witnesses said they later returned to Baghdad.

The delegation flew in on U.S. Black Hawk helicopters from a meeting in Baghdad where 1,300 delegates sought to select an interim national assembly to oversee the government of Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.

HEATED DEBATES

Heated debates over Najaf and selecting members to the assembly have dominated the unprecedented gathering in Baghdad, a step on Iraq's tortured road to democracy.


American soldiers patrol the streets of the besieged city of Najaf, in southern Iraq Tuesday Aug. 17, 2004. A U.S. warplane bombed near Najaf's vast cemetery as fighting with Shiite militants intensified Tuesday. [AP Photo] 
The conference, scheduled to end on Tuesday, was extended to Wednesday after many delegates opposed a list of 81 candidates presented to the meeting by the pro-U.S. interim government, conference chairman Fouad Massoum said.

The remaining 19 members will come from the Governing Council, a 25-member body appointed by the U.S.-led occupation before the June handover of power.

"If we stay here longer you will not be able to go home," Massoum said, referring to the shaky security situation.

Once appointed, a 100-member national council will oversee the interim government until January elections. It will be able to veto legislation with a two-thirds majority, approve the 2005 budget and appoint a new prime minister or president should either quit or die in office.

Allawi needs to quell the Shi'ite rebellion that has hit eight central and southern cities and undermined his authority just seven weeks after he took over from U.S.-led occupiers.

But he is walking a dangerous tightrope, with passions in the majority Shi'ite country at boiling point over U.S. troops fighting near holy sites in Najaf.

In Baghdad, insurgents fired a shell into a busy street, killing at least seven people including two children. The attack wounded 42 people, leaving pools of blood on sidewalks.

In London, the Ministry of Defense said a British soldier was killed during clashes with Shi'ite militiamen in Iraq's southern oil port city of Basra on Tuesday.

A Reuters photographer was wounded in the leg while covering the fighting in Najaf. The photographer, an Iraqi, was treated for bullet fragment wounds at a U.S. combat hospital and later released.

A U.S. marine was killed in action in a restive Sunni Muslim area west of Baghdad on Tuesday. A U.S. military statement said the marine, assigned to the Marine Expeditionary Force, was killed in al-Anbar province "while conducting security and stability operations."

The Anbar province includes the cities of Falluja and Ramadi where Sunni insurgents launch almost daily attacks on U.S. and Iraqi government forces.

At least 704 U.S. servicemen and women have been killed in combat since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq last year.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Natural disaster affects almost 13 million

 

   
 

Official gets death for stealing relics

 

   
 

China: US sending "wrong signal" to terrorists

 

   
 

China cracks down on "phone sex" services

 

   
 

Japanese snakehead deported from China

 

   
 

Beijing highway boss to be arrested for bribe

 

   
  Iraqi peace mission snubbed by rebel cleric
   
  Israel kills 5 in attempt to assassinate Hamas man
   
  Britain charges 8 in terror plot tied to US alert
   
  China says DPRK will not pull out of nuke talks
   
  US public now evenly split on Iraq war
   
  SEC leaves Google waiting on IPO go ahead
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Najaf fighting intensifies amid peace push
   
Iraqi peace mission in Najaf; US pounds militia
   
Three U.S. soldiers killed in Najaf
   
Najaf conflict dominates Iraq political meet
  News Talk  
  American "democracy" under the microscope...  
Advertisement
         
德昌县| 博罗县| 吉水县| 霞浦县| 清徐县| 安康市| 西乌珠穆沁旗| 益阳市| 罗定市| 金乡县| 宜良县| 迭部县| 横峰县| 余庆县| 柞水县| 敦化市| 潢川县| 开平市| 民乐县| 东乡| 贵港市| 锡林郭勒盟| 凤山县| 普兰店市| 景东| 屯昌县| 徐州市| 四子王旗| 乌鲁木齐市| 福海县| 洮南市| 平原县| 台北县| 景宁| 儋州市| 利辛县| 忻城县| 永平县| 秀山| 东山县| 肥乡县|