About UPI  |  My Account  |  UPI en Español
Free News Update:
Sign up
United Press International - News. Analysis. Insight.™ - 100 Years of Journalistic Excellence
  • Home
  • Top News
  • Entertainment
  • Odd News
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Health
  • Analysis
    • Energy Resources
    • Security Industry
    • Emerging Threats
  • Video
  • News Photos
Search:
Go
Bookmark this Page
You are here:  Home / Emerging Threats / Iraq Press Roundup

Emerging Threats

View archive | RSS Feed

Iraq Press Roundup

By HIBA DAWOOD, UPI Correspondent
Published: Oct. 10, 2007 at 2:21 PM
Order reprints  |  Print Story  |  Email to a Friend  |  Post a Comment
Al Sabah Al Jadeed newspaper reported Wednesday a security source in Nineveh province announced that U.S. helicopters bombed various parts of Mosul.

The source, who requested anonymity, told the paper that "early Tuesday morning, U.S. helicopters bombed three areas in Mosul."

The source said the reasons for the bombing "weren't clear," adding there were no records yet of casualties.

Witnesses said "sounds of bombings were heard Tuesday in residential areas."

The paper said there was no comment from Multi-National Forces on the bombing.


Al Mada newspaper reported deadly violence in Baghdad and Beiji and said terrorist cells were dismantled in Diyala.

In details, the newspaper quoted a police source as saying insurgents assassinated the head of the Shiite endowment, Ibraheem Abdul Kareem, in Baghdad Tuesday. Insurgents opened heavy fire on his car leading to his immediate death, it said.

Police sources also told the paper Tuesday that one civilian was killed and 11 wounded when two IEDs exploded in a residential area north of Baghdad. Elsewhere in Baghdad, five Iraqi civilians died and 25 were wounded when a car bomb exploded in a crowded market in downtown Baghdad Tuesday.

"Most of the dead and wounded were women and children," a security source told Al Mada.

In Beiji, Saladin province, the paper said police announced that 19 Iraqi civilians were killed and 30 wounded in two car bomb explosions Tuesday. The first explosion targeted the police chief's house and the second a mosque, the paper reported. The police chief was wounded in the attack, four of his bodyguards were killed and seven others wounded.


Shabab Al Iraq newspaper reported that Dubai-based Unity Resources Group claimed responsibility for the killing of two Iraqi women in Baghdad.

The company released a statement saying its employees shot at a civilian vehicle when it didn't stop despite warning gunfire. The report said the women became scared when they heard the gunfire and couldn't stop their vehicle. It said both women were Armenian Christians. One was 48 and the mother of three girls; the other was 30 years old.


News Photos Slideshows
Photos of the Day
Week in Photos
News
Entertainment
Sports
Features
Most Popular
Stories
Photos
Videos
1.
Analysis: U.S. military to patrol Internet
2.
Atlantic Eye: Defending Gen. Wesley Clark
3.
Analysis: Bush reforms security clearances
4.
Sunni group warns Assyrians in Mosul
5.
Iraq to sue U.N. over oil-for-food
Advertise on UPI.com
Videos
Enlarge Video
Get the Flash Player to see this player.
Bush signs war spending bill
Friday, July 4
Young Americans speak out about D.C. voting rights
Young Americans speak out about D.C. voting rights
Thursday, July 3
Home funerals: Tending to their own
Home funerals: Tending to their own
Thursday, July 3
Students say 'I do' to wedding class
Students say 'I do' to wedding class
Tuesday, June 10
© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
United Press International, UPI, the UPI logo, and other trademarks and service marks, are registered or unregistered trademarks of United Press International, Inc. in the United States and in other countries.
Search: Go
Official_Government_Wires  |   About UPI  |   Site Map  |   Terms of Use  |   Privacy Policy  |   Advertise Online  |   Contact Us
Sponsored Links: Wedding and Honeymoon Experts - Conventions - Trade Shows - Conferences - Motivational Sports Speakers Bureau - Press Release Services - Real Estate Properties in the world