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Bush's Christian Soldiers Destroy Falluja's Mosques
(Aljazeera, 10 November 2004)
Almost half of the mosques in the Iraqi town of Falluja have been destroyed, with US warplanes launching air strikes and fierce fighting on the ground continuing. . . . An Iraqi journalist told Aljazeera that US forces on Wednesday resumed attacks on the city, targeting Julan in the north-west to al-Jughaivi in the north-east. . . . Fadil al-Badrani said there are an estimated 120 mosques in the city. . . . "Almost half of the city's mosques have been destroyed after being targeted by US air and tank strikes," al-Badrani added. . . . Fierce clashes also erupted between armed fighters as the US forces thrust deeper into the city in the early hours, he said. . . . Machinegun, mortar and rocket fire shook the city as planes made several bombing runs over Julan district in the space of 15 minutes, a Reuters reporter said. . . . Smoke was rising from houses just beyond Falluja's captured rail station, where marines and Iraqi forces have a base. . . . Marines said their opponents showed no signs of giving up, even though US forces penetrated to the centre of the city, west of Baghdad, after an offensive launched on Monday night. . . . A tank platoon that moved along Falluja's main street saw fighters who had just come under mortar fire climb on to rooftops and fire rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) and machineguns. . . . "There are lots of them. We took heavy fire," Gunnery Sergeant Ishmail Castillo told Reuters. "They opened up on my tank. They don't look like they are going to cave in." . . . Castillo said his tank had killed six fighters and that two marines were wounded in fighting. "One of the marines was hit in the head by RPG shrapnel," he said. . . . "They hit us from one area and then another right afterwards. There is in-depth organisation. There were small-arms attacks all night," he said. . . . Al-Badrani said US forces had taken some casualties. "Two US military tanks have been so far destroyed in Julan neighbourhood, where the most violent clashes are taking place," he said. . . . "Three US armoured vehicles have been also destroyed in other parts of the city. The clashes are very violent. Fighters have showed up from other neighbourhoods and streets the US forces are unfamiliar with. . . . "US forces entered central Falluja city at around 12:00 (Iraqi local time) but were fiercely attacked by the fighters," al-Badrani said. . . . "They withdrew from the area after half an hour, heading for their positions in the northern parts of the city," he added. . . . Residents told al-Badrani the crews of two US tanks deserted their vehicles in Julan, leaving them to be seized by fighters. . . . Marine tanks that pushed through central Falluja on Tuesday night encountered stiff resistance. . . . The Pentagon said on Tuesday evening that at least 10 US and two Iraqi soldiers had died in the offensive unleashed by 10,000 US soldiers and marines and 2000 Iraqi troops. . . . The assault on Falluja, where residents say wounded children are dying from lack of medical help, food shops are closed and power is cut, angered Muslim clerics who urged Iraqis to boycott January elections seen as vital to peace. . . . Al-Badrani said many civilians had died in indiscriminate bombing of the city and people had resorted to burying their dead in gardens. Many houses have been destroyed. . . . "You have to stop fighting for four or five hours," Adnan al-Dulaimi, a Sunni official in the Religious Affairs Ministry, told Allawi before the evening meal, a pool reporter said. . . . "There are a lot of injured that have to be taken care of. Give them time to rescue the injured. There are civilians getting killed in Falluja. You are responsible for their lives in front of God," Dulaimi declared. . . . In a move that could potentially undermine the 27 January polls, the Sunni body, the Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), urged a boycott. . . . "The clerics call on the ... people of Iraq to boycott the coming elections that they want to hold on the remains of the dead and the blood of the wounded from Iraqi cities like Falluja and others," Harith al-Dhari, its top official, said. . . . Residents say scores of civilians died and for those struggling to live in the city, life is grim. . . . Many of the city's 300,000 people had fled to escape air strikes and artillery bombardments preceding the assault. The US military said about 150,000 residents had left. . . . Those left behind say they have no power and use kerosene lamps. They keep to ground floors for safety, some living in shattered homes because it is too dangerous to move.
posted by Lorenzo 10:30 AM
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