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IRAQ WARS
Iraq police arrest brother of US soldiers' killer

Second Iraqi journalist killed in as many days
Mosul, Iraq (AFP) Sept 8, 2010 - A second television presenter was killed in Iraq in as many days Wednesday, police said, after a watchdog reported that the war here has been the deadliest for the media since World War II. Sabah al-Khayat was shot dead in front of his house while departing for work at the Al-Mosuliyah satellite television station, where he presents a programme devoted to mosques and shrines in the main northern city of Mosul. "Armed men shot the journalist Sabah al-Khayat in front of his house in central Mosul while he was leaving for work," a police official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. His shooting came a day after Riad al-Saray, a prominent anchorman who presents political and religious programmes for state broadcaster Al-Iraqiya, was gunned down in west Baghdad.

Saray's death drew condemnation from media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) which on Tuesday urged Iraqi authorities to launch an investigation. "It would be deplorable it this killing were to go unpunished, which unfortunately has been the case in 99 per cent of the 230 murders of journalists and media workers since the US-led invasion in 2003," it said in a statement. The RSF statement coincided with the launch of a report by the Paris-based media watchdog entitled "The Iraq War: A Heavy Death Toll for the Media," covering the period from March 2003 until August 2010. "The second US war with Iraq was the most lethal for journalists since World War II," said the statement, which comes less than a week after Washington officially ended its combat mission in Iraq. "Reporters Without Borders tallied 230 cases of journalists and media staff killed in the country since the conflict broke out on 20 March 2003. That is more than those killed during 20 years of the Vietnam War or the civil war in Algeria," it added.
by Staff Writers
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Sept 8, 2010
Police on Wednesday detained the brother of an Iraqi soldier killed after gunning down two American troops and wounding nine others, the first US deaths since combat operations were declared over.

Tuesday's violence, which also saw two US soldiers wounded in a grenade attack, and a firefight in Baghdad two days earlier involving American soldiers, were a stark reminder that despite Washington's claim of a move to "stability operations," its forces in Iraq remain at risk.

The gunman, enlisted man Soran Rahman Saleh Wali, opened fire on his US comrades who were visiting the Al-Saadiq Air Base near the town of Tuz Khurmatu in Salaheddin province, killing the two Americans and wounding nine others.

Security officials said Wali shot them after an argument erupted, but there were no details on what sparked the row or on his motives.

Defence ministry spokesman Major General Mohammed al-Askari had initially told AFP the quarrel was over a sports match, but he later retracted those remarks and said it was unclear why it occurred.

"Marwan, Soran's brother, who works as a policeman in Tuz Khurmatu, was arrested yesterday by police forces and is now being held," a police colonel in the town told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"Iraqi and US joint forces also raided Soran's house overnight, but did not find anyone there." The US military said it was not involved in the raid.

The colonel said Wali's corpse, which was moved from Kirkuk mortuary to Tuz Khurmatu hospital for further tests, had sustained nine gun shots, including to the head and abdomen.

US and Iraqi military officials said they had opened investigations into the shooting.

"A preliminary review of reports from the scene indicates the attack was a deliberate act," the US military said in a statement. "The detailed investigation will clarify the facts and actions of all involved."

Brigadier General Jeffrey Buchanan, spokesman for US forces in Iraq, said that while the incident was "tragic", it did not "affect our strong commitment to the mission of advising and assisting the Iraqi security forces."

"We stand firmly beside them," he added.

Tuz Khurmatu police commander Colonel Hussein Bayati said that on Monday, US and Iraqi forces "began searching houses in the neighbourhood where this soldier was from, because they suspected Ansar al-Sunna (insurgent) fighters were hiding there."

It was unclear if Wali might already have been under surveillance or if the sweep had angered him.

The shooter's immediate family declined to speak to AFP.

But his cousin and neighbour Abu Shwan said he was "a moderate in his religious views, and he was not strict in his beliefs."

Also on Tuesday, a grenade attack on a US military convoy in the Salaheddin provincial capital Tikrit wounded two American soldiers and four Iraqi civilians, US Army Lieutenant Colonel Jeffrey Allen said.

"A convoy returning from a PRT (Provincial Reconstruction Team) support mission was attacked by what we believe to be two assailants with hand grenades," Allen said.

"One of the attackers was killed as a result, but the grenades exploded, wounding four Iraqi civilians who were in the area... Two soldiers were also wounded in the attack but both were treated for their wounds."

Under the terms of a bilateral security pact, US soldiers -- nearly 50,000 American troops remain stationed in Iraq -- are allowed to return fire in self-defence, and take part in operations if requested by local forces.

Tuesday's deaths were the first American military fatalities since the US declared an end to its combat mission in Iraq on September 1.

The violence brought to 4,418 the total number of US soldiers who have died in Iraq since the 2003 invasion, according to an AFP tally based on independent website icasualties.org.

The shooting came just two days after American troops helped repel a coordinated suicide attack on an Iraqi army complex in Baghdad by providing "suppressive fire" to give cover to local forces as they stormed a building in which insurgents had hidden.



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