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To: xcr600 who wrote (11391)4/1/2003 1:40:36 PM
From: Bucky Katt  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 48461
 
Iraqi civilian casualties mount
At least 11 members of the same family - mostly children - have been killed in a coalition air strike on a residential district in central Iraq, western news reports say.
Hospital sources in Hilla, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) south of Baghdad, said they were among 33 civilians killed and more than 300 injured in the attack early on Tuesday morning.

US-led forces have not commented on the incident, which follows Monday's killing of seven Iraqi women and children at a checkpoint near the southern city of Najaf.

US commanders said they would investigate the Najaf killing, but their first reaction was to back the troops.

Correspondents say the incidents will increase criticism of US-led troops who are continuing their advance towards Baghdad, in the face of stiff Iraqi resistance.

Key military developments:

Intelligence reports suggest that Iraq's elite Republican Guard has moved to reinforce its two most forward divisions south of the capital Baghdad as they come under more intense bombardment

Iraq says its forces have foiled a "landing attempt" by British forces near the northern city of Mosul. UK officials will neither confirm nor deny the incident

The US says it has seized an Iraqi general, who has provided information on Iraqi deployments

UK forces say their positions in southern Iraq have come under attack from short-range missiles - the first time Iraqi missiles have been aimed at targets inside Iraq rather than Kuwait.

Revenge call

The attack near Hilla began on Monday as part of the US-led advance towards Baghdad.

US forces said many Iraqis and at least one American were killed in fierce fighting there - the closest the clashes have been to the capital.

IRAQ CAMPAIGN

Hilla hospital director Murtada Abbas said the bombing had targeted the Nader residential area.

Correspondents reported seeing children wrapped in blankets on the floor of the hospital.

Among them was Razek al-Kazem al-Khafaji, who said he had lost his wife, six children, his father, his mother, and two brothers.

He said the family was fleeing fierce fighting in Nasiriya, further south, when they were attacked.

"God take our revenge on America," he was reported as saying.

Referring to the incident at a news briefing in Baghdad, Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf accused coalition forces of being "racist".

"They are indiscriminately killing people," Mr al-Sahaf said. "Hilla is my hometown. It is a civilian place."

Checkpoint

US officials have backed their soldiers over the Najaf incident.

"Our soldiers on the ground have an absolute right to defend themselves," General Peter Pace, vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said.

The BBC's Peter Hunt says the jittery nature of troops on the ground has been heightened by the deaths of four American soldiers on Saturday in a suicide car bomb attack.
This has been reinforced by a report of US marines killing an Iraqi who drove at speed at their checkpoint outside the southern town of Shatra, north of Nasiriya, on Tuesday.

Taken together, our correspondent says, these incidents might hamper efforts by the US-led troops to build a relationship of trust with Iraqi civilians they encounter, as they could create an impression of a force which shoots first and asks questions later.

Last Wednesday, a huge explosion which caused a large number of civilian deaths in a Baghdad shopping area.

UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said it was "increasingly probable" that it was the result of Iraqi action, rather than a coalition missile.

Advance on Baghdad

Coalition aircraft began a new round of intense bombing of Republican Guard positions on the southern outskirts of Baghdad on Tuesday.

CASUALTIES OF WAR
US: 43 military dead (including 11 in accidents, 2 under investigation), 17 missing
UK: 26 military dead (including 15 in accidents, 5 to 'friendly fire')
Iraq: Iraq: Military casualties not disclosed
Civilian casualties: Nearly 600 dead

Figures from respective governments
American military commanders believe the first clashes have started in what could turn out to be the battle for Baghdad, says the BBC's Gavin Hewitt who is travelling with the US 3rd Infantry Division.

US commanders claim that significant damage has been done, not just to Republican Guard units themselves, but to their logistics and support apparatus which makes them into a unified fighting force.

Other developments:

In a message read out on Iraqi television, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein calls on Iraqis to hit US and UK forces everywhere.

US Secretary of State Colin Powell heads for Ankara and Brussels on the first foreign trip by a senior US official since the war began.

Iraqi authorities say two buses carrying American and European "human shields" have been attacked by a US warplane on the Baghdad-Amman highway

Story from BBC NEWS:
news.bbc.co.uk
_______________________

As I said, this growing list of civilian killings will not be met kindly in the Arab world...



To: xcr600 who wrote (11391)4/2/2003 11:14:31 AM
From: Bucky Katt  Respond to of 48461
 
Yes he should, but he holds absolute power, just like someone we know in the middle east.

This is the great>

John Kass

Daley's abuse of power leaves marks on city

Published April 2, 2003

I've been trying to figure out Chicago's outrage over what Mayor Richard Daley did to Meigs Field, after he sent bulldozers at night to ruin the nice little lakefront airport.

And I started out to joke about how the savaging of a tiny airport upset so many. But then I realized that Mayor Little Big Man's destruction of Meigs isn't funny.

Yet his carving of the large ugly X's into the landing strip, his arrogance in brushing off questions, has accomplished something remarkable. He crystallized things for Chicago.

This is not a complicated story of insider deals, of contracts, connections, of documented paper trails.

Rather, it is simple, with photographs, something TV is interested in watching: the destruction of a valuable resource simply because it was in Daley's way, and because he knew no one could stop him.

Little Big Man finally revealed himself as the absolute boss ruling Chicago and Cook County with wrought-iron fists.

Most readers, and a few of his newfound critics, are bothered that he destroyed the airport at night. They're aggravated that he'd use a pathetic story--protecting Chicago from tiny-plane terrorism--as cover for vandalizing Meigs, which he has wanted to do for years.

Will it be another $500 million park--the bond financing arranged by the influential bond seller Tony Fratto, finally costing a billion in real money?

Or will it become a casino?

One thing it's not anymore is an airport. It was chopped up before the Friends of Meigs Field could get to a judge. But Daley is the one who elects judges.

Compared to other things he's done, Meigs is chump change, almost insignificant in dollars and in the exercise of power.

The other things weren't done at night. They were done during broad daylight, hundreds of millions of dollars worth of deals paid for by taxpayers.

The wrought iron from his pals, the concrete flower boxes, the asphalt, the gargantuan salt contracts, the salt spread so heavily each night in winter that city crews had to sweep the pasty choking stuff off the Loop streets in the morning.

The French bus shelter deal went through, with his allies on the CTA board attached. When Michigan Avenue merchants balked, they were threatened with blackmail by CTA boss "Honest" Frank Kruesi--their names and businesses were to be plastered on buses.

Or that goofy $600 million Soldier Field renovation--which squats rudely on the lakefront like a fat man trying to squeeze into a pair of tiny shorts.

Or the ridiculously expensive lakefront Millennium Park (Fratto's Field), the phony government minority contracts diverted instead to pink guys with Outfit connections, the car towing deals and so on.

Meanwhile, Daley's brothers get rich on zoning work and the political selling of insurance, and he sneers at those who dare question him.

Few do. Unfortunately, too many Chicago journalists, once considered tough, don't like to aggravate him with questions he doesn't want to answer.

What passes for TV news in Chicago isn't interested in covering politics like it once did. TV often ignores this newspaper's investigative reporting on City Hall and the gutsy editorials on the editorial page about political sleaze and costly layered deals of high-ranking cronies.

On Tuesday, though, even the once feisty Chicago Sun-Times, the Pravda of political Chicago, thought Daley had gone too far.

"Meigs maneuvers land Daley where critics want him," the newspaper headlined its editorial, apparently worried that he had clumsily exposed himself to some evil critic, whoever he is.

By using the awesome leverage of his control over local governments and the courts, by stoking public contracts and subsequent campaign donations to intimidate and buy off his opposition, he's the one boss.

He has co-opted not only the usual political hacks but, shrewdly, has also scooped up the once independent arts community, using organized subsidies, new theaters, grants for dancers, actors, artists, poets.

He has Jesse "The King of Beers" Jackson protecting his flank among blacks. His army of Latino patronage workers, the Hispanic Democratic Organization, weakens Spanish-speaking opposition.

And he remains white in the city of tribes.

Except for some of my colleagues at this newspaper, there is no real challenge to the manner in which he whips Chicago in line, with muscle and with fear.

If you don't believe the fear, ask any tavern owner or shopkeeper, cop, firefighter or city worker. Listen to the trembling voices of corporate business leaders when they're questioned about Meigs. They're terrified of angering him.

Yet for all of that, it has been his destruction of Meigs Field that has distilled one idea in many:

That Cook County and the people in it are his, that Daley can break his toys and leave them strewn on the ground, simply because he can.

chicagotribune.com