Iraq: U.S. military kills five children,
two men and four women
By Amer Amery
03/15/06 -- TIKRIT, Iraq (Reuters)
- Eleven members of an Iraqi family were killed in a U.S. raid on
Wednesday, police and witnesses said. The U.S. military said two women and
a child died during the bid to seize an al Qaeda militant from a house.
Television pictures showed 11 bodies in the Tikrit morgue -- five
children, two men and four women. A freelance photographer later saw the
bodies being buried in Ishaqi, the town 100 km (60 miles) north of Baghdad
where the raid took place.
The U.S. military said in a statement its troops had attacked a house in
Ishaqi early on Wednesday to capture a "foreign fighter facilitator for
the al Qaeda in Iraq network".
"Troops were engaged by enemy fire as they approached the building," U.S.
spokesman Major Tim Keefe said. "Coalition Forces returned fire utilising
both air and ground assets.
"There was one enemy killed. Two women and one child were also killed in
the firefight. The building ... (was) destroyed."
Keefe said the al Qaeda suspect had been captured and was being
questioned.
RUBBLE
Major Ali Ahmed of the Ishaqi police said U.S. forces had landed
on the roof of the house in the early hours and shot the 11 occupants,
including the five children.
"After they left the house they blew it up," he said.
Another policeman, Major Farouq Hussein, said all the bodies had gunshot
wounds to the head.
Pictures of the house targeted in the raid showed it had been reduced to
rubble, while next to it lay the burnt-out wreckage of a truck.
Iraqi police said the U.S. military had asked for a meeting with
local tribal leaders.
Photographs of the funeral showed men weeping as five children were
wrapped in blankets and then lined up in a row next to freshly dug graves.
Police in Salahaddin province, a heartland of the Sunni Arab insurgency
and the home region of Saddam Hussein, have frequently criticised U.S.
military tactics in the area.
In January a U.S. air strike on a house in Baiji, further north, killed
several members of a family. In December U.S. fighter jets dropped two
500-pound bombs on a village, also in the region, killing 10 people. The
U.S. military said the people targeted had been suspected of planting
roadside bombs.
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