Skip navigation
advertisement

50 Iraqis kidnapped at Baghdad bus stations


< Prev | 1 | 2
NBC VIDEO
Violence continues in Iraq
June 5: More than 50 people were kidnapped at bus stops in Iraq Monday. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

Nightly News

Conflict in Iraq video  
Money talks for Blackwater in Iraq
Nov. 10: The New York Times reports that the Blackwater security company authorized secret payments to Iraqi officials to silence criticism. Rachel Maddow talks about these new revelations with Jeremy Scahill, reporter for The Nation.

  Timeline  
  
Image: Ayatollah Khomeini
AP file

The relationship is at center of world affairs and America's global interests

Interactive
Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political powerplays in this virtual tour led by NBC’s Richard Engel.
Text alerts on msnbc.com

Breaking news alerts (about 1 per day)
Click here to sign up or text NEWS to MSNBC (67622).

Find more alerts at alerts.msnbc.com

“I know that there are very active discussions under way right now to fill those positions. We think that that is important. We hope that that, in fact, occurs in the very near future,” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said.

“That will send an important signal to the Iraqi people that they have a full government working on their behalf, especially in those positions where you would have individuals that would be free from the taint of association with militias,” he added.

The Bush administration hopes a unity government will drain support for the Sunni-led insurgency and restore order in Baghdad and elsewhere in the country, enabling the United States to begin withdrawing its forces.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

1,500 U.S. forces move into Anbar
In the meantime, about 1,500 U.S. combat troops have been moved from Kuwait to Sunni-dominated Anbar province some 70 miles west of Baghdad to help restore order.

On Monday, U.S.-led forces fired artillery at the train station in Anbar’s provincial capital of Ramadi, “targeting four military-aged males unloading a weapons cache.”

A hospital official, Dr. Omar al-Duleimi, said American forces killed five civilians and wounded 15. The U.S. military said the mission had “positive effects on the target,” but it denied that civilians were killed or injured in the city west of the capital.

The influential Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars warned the U.S.-backed Iraqi government against participating in any assaults in Anbar, a vast province that stretches from western Baghdad to the borders with Syria and Jordan.

“Its consequences would be very dangerous for the Iraqi society and for the government,” said Mohammed Bashar al-Faidi, a spokesman for the Sunni group, which is believed to have links to insurgents.

Al-Maliki has said his government was working on a plan to restore security to Ramadi and that Iraqi forces would work with U.S. troops.

Killing persists in Baghdad
At least 17 killings were reported across the country Monday, including a Shiite school guard and two Sunni brothers who were shot to death as they were driving to college in the capital. Iraqi police found the blindfolded and bound body of a man who had been shot in the head and chest and another body that had been shot in the head in separate locations in Baghdad.

There were also unconfirmed reports that gunmen may have killed at least 11 college students in Baghdad’s southern Dora district.

According to Capt. Jamil Hussein of the al-Yarmouk police station, gunmen opened fire on a minibus in Dora’s predominantly Sunni Arab Mahdiya neighborhood. He said 11 people were killed, but Al-Yarmouk hospital reported receiving only two bodies from a shooting. It was unclear if the victims were Sunni or Shiite.

There was no one available at Baghdad’s main morgue to confirm if it had received any bodies.

On Sunday, masked gunmen stopped two minivans carrying students north of Baghdad, ordered the passengers off, separated Shiites from Sunni Arabs, and killed the 21 Shiites “in the name of Islam,” a witness said.

In southern Iraq, an explosive device went off near an Italian patrol Monday night, killing one Italian soldier and wounding four, Adm. Gianpaolo Di Paolo announced in Rome. The military said the blast occurred about 60 miles north of Nasiriyah, where the Italians are based.

Man sentenced in aid worker’s abduction
Separately, a 30-year-old Iraqi man accused of helping the kidnappers of aid worker Margaret Hassan was sentenced to life in prison, while two other suspects were acquitted, a court official said.

Hassan, 59, the director of CARE international in Iraq and a citizen of Britain, Ireland and Iraq, was abducted in Baghdad in October 2004. She was killed a month later. Her body has never been found.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


< Prev | 1 | 2

Sponsored LinksGet listed here
Top Online Schools
Find the perfect online school and Boost your Career! Free Info Pack.
www.EarnMyDegree.com

Sponsored links

Resource guide