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Driver killed as US troops open fire on car near Baghdad

Iraq's Tareq Aziz will not be spared death penalty: son
Amman (AFP) Nov 27, 2010 - Iraq's former deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz is bound to be executed despite international calls to Baghdad to spare him, his son told AFP in Jordan on Saturday. "I am not optimistic and I believe that the Iraqi government is turning a deaf ear to all the appeals being made for an amnesty or for the sentence to be annulled or commuted," the Amman-based Ziad Aziz said. Aziz was sentenced to death on October 26 for the suppression of Shiite religious parties in the 1980s, and is also on trial for a crackdown on Iraqi Kurds. Iraq's supreme criminal court found the long-time international face of former president Saddam Hussein's regime guilty of "deliberate murder and crimes against humanity," sentencing him to death. In poor health and among Saddam's few surviving top cohorts, Aziz, 74, has been in prison since surrendering in April 2003, shortly after the fall of Baghdad in the US-led invasion of Iraq.

Aziz, who was born to a Christian family, was foreign minister and deputy prime minister under Saddam who was executed in 2006. "Everyone in Iraq, the young before the old, knows that the sentence against my father was politically motivated and that he had nothing to do with the repression of religious factions," Aziz said. The death sentence provoked a wave of appeals for clemency from around the world, including from rights groups, the European Union, Russia and the Vatican. Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini plans to ask Iraqi authorities during a visit next month for "a gesture of clemency," his spokesman Maurizio Massari said on Friday. Frattini is set to visit Baghdad on December 5. And on Thursday the European Parliament urged Iraq to drop the death sentence, warning in a resolution that killing him would "do little to improve the climate of violence." Iraqi President Jalal Talabani had said on November 17 that he would not sign the execution order against Aziz.

But the EU parliament noted that the Iraqi constitution includes "mechanisms for executions to be carried out on parliamentary authority." One of Aziz's lawyers, Badie Aref, said on Thursday that he was sceptical about Talabani's intentions. "Mr Talabani's remarks were not clear," Aref told AFP. "He said he would not sign (the execution order) but he did not say he would oppose it. That's why I'm sceptical." Aref also complained that the defence was "unable to appeal because it never received the text of the verdict." On October 27, another defence lawyer, Giovanni Di Stefano, said that Aziz will probably not appeal his death sentence as this would legitimise the court that handed down the verdict. "We probably won't," Di Stefano told AFP in Rome when asked if the defence team would appeal, adding that he had appealed instead to the UN Human Rights Commissioner and the Inter-American Human Rights Commission. Aziz had 30 days to appeal.
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 28, 2010
US troops early Sunday fired on a darkened car speeding towards a military convoy on the road to Baghdad's international airport, killing the driver, an army spokesman told AFP.

The slain driver was an employee of national carrier Iraqi Airways, an airport source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

US Army spokesman Colonel Barry Johnson said the convoy was moving on the highway towards the Camp Victory American base base near the airport before sunrise on Sunday when a car approached "at high speed from the rear without its lights on."

"The driver failed to slow down, turn on his lights or react to hand-and-arm signals and other escalation-of-force procedures from the convoy," Johnson said.

The vehicle was perceived as a threat and US soldiers opened fire.

"We deeply regret that this action resulted in the death of an Iraqi who was driving the vehicle," Johnson said.

Iraqi drivers, he added, "know that they must use caution and avoid threatening behavior when approaching military vehicles."

The highway to the airport, known within the US military as "Route Irish" and grimly dubbed "RPG (rocket propelled grenade) alley", has long been considered as among the most dangerous in the world.

Those using the road were subject to daily attacks from insurgents during the peak of Iraq's sectarian war in 2006 and 2007.

The pothole-littered highway was lined on both sides with blast walls, with burning cars a frequent sight, as Sunni Arab fighters who formed the bedrock of an anti-US insurgency after the 2003 invasion would routinely fire rockets and missiles onto its users.

Violence across the country, including along the highway, has however dropped dramatically in the past year and Baghdad's mayor announced a week ago he wanted to beautify the road by the time the capital hosts an Arab League summit in March next year.

earlier related report
Iraq arrests militants suspected of deadly church attack
Baghdad (AFP) Nov 27, 2010 - Iraq has arrested 12 militants suspected of helping take Christians hostage in a church siege that killed 44 worshippers and two priests last month, an interior ministry official said on Saturday.

The arrests were the first since the October 31 attack, which drew widespread international condemnation, and included the capture of Al-Qaeda's chief in Baghdad in raids in the capital's east and west.

"Police have arrested 12 members of the group responsible for the attack against the church," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity and without specifying when they were detained.

Among those apprehended were Huthaifa al-Batawi, the Baghdad chief of the Islamic State of Iraq, the Al-Qaeda front group which carried out the attack, while senior ISI leader Ammar al-Najadi was killed.

Batawi replaced Munaf Abdul Rahim al-Rawi, who was arrested by Iraqi security forces on March 11.

Iraqi security forces have said Rawi's arrest provided crucial intelligence that helped lead to the killings in April of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, the political leader of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, and Abu Ayub al-Masri, the insurgent group's self-styled "minister of war."

The 12 militants were captured in raids carried out in the upscale west Baghdad neighbourhood of Mansur and on Palestine Street in the east of the city, the official said.

He added that authorities seized six tonnes of explosives and toxic gas in the properties raided, and said the arrests had helped prevent several attacks, including ones targeting Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone which is home to several embassies and government buildings.

In all, 44 worshippers, two priests and seven security force personnel were killed during the October 31 seizure of the Baghdad cathedral and ensuing shoot-out when it was stormed by troops.

Around 60 other people were wounded in the bloodbath, and the five militants who carried it out were also killed.

Al-Qaeda said it launched the church attack to force the release of converts to Islam allegedly being detained by the Coptic Church in Egypt. Days later it declared Christians everywhere "legitimate targets."

Less than two weeks after the church attack, a string of bombings targeting Christian homes and shops in Baghdad killed six more people.

Between 800,000 and 1.2 million Christians lived in Iraq before the US-led invasion of 2003, but their number has since shrunk to around 500,000 in the face of repeated attacks against their community and places of worship.

The number of Christians in Baghdad has now dwindled to around 150,000, a third of their former population in the capital.

Pope Benedict XVI on Sunday spoke of his sense of solidarity towards Iraq's beleaguered Christian community, while issuing an appeal for religious freedom worldwide.

"Religious communities in Italy are praying today, at the request of their bishops, for the Christians who are suffering from persecution and discrimination, notably in Iraq," the pope said during his weekly Angelus prayer in St Peter's Square.

Saturday's arrest came a day after Cairo-based satellite TV channel Al-Baghdadiya said it had shut its Iraq operations after its broadcasts were cut for airing the demands of the militants who launched the church attack.



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US contacts Turkey over WikiLeaks files: diplomat
Ankara (AFP) Nov 26, 2010
The United States has been in contact with Turkey over new files to be released on the Internet by WikiLeaks, Turkish officials said Friday, stressing Ankara's commitment to fighting terrorism. According to media reports, the planned release by the whistle-blowing website includes papers suggesting that Turkey helped Al-Qaeda militants in Iraq, and that the United States helped Iraq-based Ku ... read more







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