• Kirkuk lawmaker wary of city's status
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 6:46 PM
    BAGHDAD, May 13 (UPI) -- A Kurdish lawmaker Tuesday said Baghdad is so divided over a constitutional provision concerning the legal status of Kirkuk that it won't address the issue.
  • Iraqi NGO calls for international funds
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 6:44 PM
    BAGHDAD, May 13 (UPI) -- The head of a consortium of Iraqi aid groups appealed to international donors to help displaced Iraqis and called on Baghdad to do better in helping its own.
  • Iraqi girls' school gets upgrade
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 6:36 PM
    BAGHDAD, May 13 (UPI) -- Iraqi citizens, local leaders and a representative from the Ministry of Education attended a ceremony marking the completion of a girls' school in Mahmudiyah.
  • Outside View: Open letter to candidates
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 5:58 PM
    By NEIL WOLLMAN and ABIGAIL FULLER
    UPI Outside View Commentators
    Thus far, your debate on the war in Iraq -- like the public and media debate -- has focused mainly on the questions of progress in security and political reconciliation, with some limited discussion on the war's effects on the U.S. economy and on our military preparedness elsewhere.
  • Iraq Press Roundup
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 12:29 PM
    By HIBA DAWOOD
    UPI Correspondent
    The daily Al Sabah newspaper said in its editorial Tuesday that Hezbollah's taking over part of Beirut reminds us of similarities with the situation in Iraq.
  • Feature: Notes on Iraq
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 12:14 PM
    By RICHARD TOMKINS
    FOB NORMANDY, Iraq, May 13 (UPI) -- FOBs and COPs may sound like a new board game or Xbox distraction, but they're acronyms that actually define the lives of U.S. troops here.
  • Analysis: Cybercrooks get credit card data
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 12:00 PM
    By SHAUN WATERMAN
    UPI Homeland and National Security Editor
    WASHINGTON, May 13 (UPI) -- Three men who hacked into the Dave and Busters restaurant chain and stole its customers' credit card data face federal fraud and conspiracy charges.
  • Feature: Divisions, al-Qaida leave legacy
    Published: May 13, 2008 at 10:01 AM
    By RICHARD TOMKINS
    MUQDADIYA, Iraq, May 12 (UPI) -- Hassan Abbas Mahmoud is an optimist, a desperate man or both.
  • Atlantic Eye: Of kings and kingmakers
    Published: May 12, 2008 at 3:05 PM
    By MARC S. ELLENBOGEN
    UPI International Columnist
    BLOIS, France, May 12 (UPI) -- Lord Holme of Cheltenham was the former chairman of the British Liberal Party -- a classic European free-market oriented, centrist party. He was chair of the English College Foundation in Prague, where we became friends. To his enemies, he spent 30 years as the phantom behind the scenes, the kingmaker. A member of Global Panel America's Advisory Board, he lost his fight to brain cancer last week.

Iraq Press Roundup


Published: May 7, 2008 at 3:29 PM
HELICOPTER ATTACK
U.S. HELICOPTER ATTACK IN BAGHDAD NEIGHBORHOOD KILLS THREE
Iraqi children linger around a vehicle after it was attacked by a U.S. helicopter in the Baghdad Moslem Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City on Tuesday July 3, 2007. Three people were killed in the attack and another 6 were wounded. Nobody knows why the vehicle was targeted. (UPI Photo/Adel Abd al-Hassan)
By HIBA DAWOOD
UPI Correspondent
Shebab Al Iraq newspaper Wednesday carried an editorial with the headline "Who is responsible for the atrocities in Sadr City?"

The editorial said mortar shells were launched at the "fortified" Green Zone from the area around the main hospital in Sadr City, east of Baghdad. It said the response from U.S. forces was fast: Planes fired missiles at the direction from which the shells were launched.

"The causalities were eight dead and 20 injured. Many houses were destroyed, the hospital was partially damaged, and many ambulances and about 20 civilian cars parked near the hospital were damaged," it said.

The editorial accused the Mehdi Army, loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, of starting the fights and causing the deaths of many civilians. It said Shiite attackers used residential areas as bases in order to prevent retaliation from Iraqi or U.S. forces.

"Attacks and responses to such attacks have been happening every day, causing a thousand civilian dead and several thousands of wounded," it said.

Shebab Al Iraq said eyewitness testimony said Mehdi Army fighters used public parks, squares and crowded areas as bases to launch mortars at the Green Zone. It said the Mehdi Army aims to increase casualties, assuming it angers residents of Sadr City and the rest of Baghdad toward U.S. forces and the Iraqi government.

The paper said Sadr City residents are arranging for a protest against the Mehdi Army because of civilian losses and property damage.

"Today, the people of Sadr City have crossed the line of fear they have always had from the Mehdi Army, and started to lift roadside bombs Mehdi Army fighters plant in front of their houses," it said.

It said Sadr City residents also blame the Iraqi government for the destruction in Sadr City as it responds by attacking the most crowded part of Sadr City when the Mehdi Army attacks the Green Zone.

"The civilians who are caught in the middle of fighting and attacks accuse Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki of letting the Mehdi Army militia control the city of about 4 million people, bringing hardship," it said.


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