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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (469218)10/2/2003 10:51:45 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
MORE BLOOD ON BUSH's HANDS:
Three U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq; Job Applicants Riot in
Baghdad
Men desperate to join a fledgling police force say corrupt recruiters reneged on promises.

By Tyler Marshall, Times Staff Writer

BAGHDAD — Three American soldiers were killed and three were
wounded Wednesday in separate attacks apparently launched by groups
resisting the U.S. presence in Iraq.

U.S. military officials in Baghdad said the incidents — in the town of Tikrit, an
affluent Baghdad neighborhood and the town of Samarra — occurred during
routine patrols. They brought the number of Americans killed in action to 89
since May 1, the day President Bush declared an end to major hostilities. A
total of 313 American troops have died in the conflict.

The deaths came several hours after American forces were called in to help
quell a mini-riot in central Baghdad involving a group of enraged job
applicants who turned on police when told that long-promised positions as law
enforcement recruits had failed to materialize.

Iraqi police fired warning shots as the group attacked a police station with
rocks and set two cars on fire. Two people reportedly were injured.

The protesters, who were seeking work with the fledgling Facilities Protection
Service, which guards banks, schools, hospitals and other government
installations, alleged that they were cheated by corrupt officers. They said they
had paid large bribes in return for the promise that their applications would be
shepherded through the selection process. Some said they had paid $100 and pledged half their first
paycheck.

The demonstrators milled around the area for nearly an hour, melting away soon after U.S. soldiers
arrived.

The unrest in the capital came hours before an apparently makeshift bomb exploded a few hundred
yards from the main U.S. base in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, claiming the life of one
American soldier and wounding two others. Associated Press reported that the fatality was a woman
attached to the Army's 4th Infantry Division.

A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad declined to confirm that the casualty was a woman. He said the
soldiers were traveling in a convoy when the bomb went off.

The role of women in combat was severely restricted until 1992, when Congress repealed exclusion
laws, allowing women to fly combat aircraft and serve on combat vessels. That same year, the
Pentagon eased its own restrictions but kept in place one that prevents women from being assigned to
units for "direct ground combat with the enemy."

In Iraq, women have taken on dozens of risky roles, including flying combat aircraft, driving supply
trucks to the front lines and serving in combat support units.

The second soldier was shot by a small-caliber weapon late Wednesday while on patrol in Baghdad's
Mansour district, where many foreign embassies are located.

The third incident occurred outside the town of Samarra, near Tikrit, when a rocket-propelled grenade
hit a convoy. Lt. Col. Bill MacDonald, 4th Infantry Division spokesman, said a soldier was severely
wounded and died soon afterward at a field hospital.

The demonstration in the capital, which involved more than 100 potential recruits, reflects the rising
desperation among young men in postwar Iraq, where unemployment is estimated at 60%. It also
underscored the fact that despite the collapse of Hussein's Baathist regime, the corruption so endemic
under Hussein remains a serious problem.

Associated Press reported that police in the northern city of Mosul also fired warning shots to break up
a march on a local employment office by hundreds of young men demanding jobs.

With emotions over the lack of work already high in the country's major cities, the charges of
corruption against police in Baghdad only exacerbated the tensions. The frustration among those
protesting was evident.

"I paid what they asked of me, [but] all they say is, 'Come next week, come tomorrow,' " said
25-year-old Sami Kadhim, a recent college graduate.

Added another, who did not identify himself: "They are taking 50, 60, 70,000 dinars [about $25 to
$35] and saying: 'In three to four days you'll get a job. If you don't pay, we'll just throw away your
application.' "

Some applicants said they had been constantly following up on applications they had submitted —
along with bribes — months ago.

In interviews, recently recruited members of the Facilities Protection Service indicated that recruits
hired by the U.S.-led coalition forces did not have to pay bribes but that Iraqi officials frequently
demanded them. Two members of the service, interviewed Wednesday at Baghdad University,
indicated that the problem was widely known.

"Yes, we are aware of that fact [the need to pay bribes for jobs] and so are the Americans, but they
tend to turn a blind eye to it," said Waleed Khalid Ali, 35.

Wednesday's incident came on a day that an Iraqi newspaper, Al Taakhi, reported that 200 police
officers had been arrested on suspicion of corruption. The report carried few details.



To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (469218)10/2/2003 10:57:10 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
sorry buddy, you are the originator that Arabs are sub human and your mind some association with skin color in just one more of you jason blair moments of libel about another who never made the association or suggested Arabs are sub humans.

Your mis-interpretation shows you the jason blair or the person who really believes the interpretation.