[Excerpt: Al-Arabiya television broadcast a videotape showing three men 
identified by insurgents as election workers who were kidnapped in the 
northern city of Mosul. The satellite station said the three were 
abducted by the Nineveh Mujahedeen, which threatened to attack polling 
stations on election day.]

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/I/IRAQ?SITE=MABOC&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Jan 26, 6:30 AM EST

Iraqi Insurgents Attack Polling Stations

By SAMEER N. YACOUB
Associated Press Writer
    
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Insurgents staged attacks against U.S. forces, 
schools to be used as polling stations and political party offices on 
Wednesday, as they pressed a bloody campaign to undermine Iraq's weekend 
elections. A U.S. Marine transport helicopter crashed in western Iraq.

Three car bombs exploded Wednesday in Riyadh, a tense town north of 
Baghdad, killing at least five people, including three policemen. One of 
the car bombs targeted a U.S. convoy but there was no report of 
casualties, police said.

In Baghdad's Sadr City district, Iraqi forces backed by U.S. troops 
raided a Shiite mosque, detaining up to 25 followers of a radical cleric 
Muqtada al-Sadr, police and the cleric's supporters said.

There was no immediate word on casualties in the helicopter crash, which 
took place Wednesday morning near the town of Rutbah while the aircraft 
was transporting 1st Marine Division forces, the U.S. military said in a 
statement.

A search and rescue team had reached the site and an investigation into 
what caused the crash was underway, the military said.

Meanwhile, a U.S. convoy was attacked on the dangerous road to Baghdad 
airport and at least one vehicle was destroyed, witnesses said. The U.S. 
and British embassies banned their staffs from traveling on the road 
last year because of repeated attacks on the highway. There was no word 
on casualties.

U.S. troops found at least six bombs at different locations around 
Baghdad, the military said. Iraqi police discovered two more bombs in 
the Shiite holy city of Najaf, where turnout in the Sunday national 
elections is expected to be high.

In a statement, the U.S. command said the six bombs were discovered 
early Wednesday in widely scattered areas of the Iraqi capital.
    
"We've been very successful finding and destroying improvised explosive 
devices in Baghdad, limiting the insurgent's ability to kill or injure 
innocent Iraqis," said Maj. Philip Smith, a spokesman for the 1st 
Cavalry Division and Task Force Baghdad.

The car bombs in Riyadh, located about 40 miles southwest of Kirkuk, 
exploded at a police station, in front of the mayor's office and along a 
road used by U.S. troops, police said. Nine people were injured in 
addition to the five deaths.

Residents of the insurgent-filled city of Ramadi, 70 miles west of 
Baghdad, reported clashes there Wednesday between U.S. troops and 
rebels. The fighting erupted when militants attacked a U.S. patrol with 
rocket-propelled grenades, the residents said. One Iraqi was killed and 
two were wounded, doctors said.

Insurgents also attacked buildings linked to Sunday's national 
elections. The rebels have threatened attacks against polling centers, 
candidates and voters in an attempt to derail the vote.

Two schools slated to be used as polling stations were bombed overnight, 
and a bomb was found in a third school but defused.

A ground floor classroom in one of the buildings, a preparatory school 
for girls, was littered with shattered glass and its main entrance was 
blackened and clogged with debris.

Al-Arabiya television broadcast a videotape showing three men identified 
by insurgents as election workers who were kidnapped in the northern 
city of Mosul. The satellite station said the three were abducted by the 
Nineveh Mujahedeen, which threatened to attack polling stations on 
election day.

The Iraqi government on Wednesday announced it would ban travel between 
provinces and extend the hours of curfew from 7 p.m. until 6 a.m., 
starting Friday, as part of heightened security before the elections.

Also Wednesday, a 1st Infantry Division soldier was killed and two 
others were wounded when insurgents attacked their patrol with rocket 
propelled grenades near the northern town of Duluiyah, the U.S. command 
said.

In other election-related attacks, gunmen opened fire on the local 
headquarters of the Communist Party and a major Kurdish party north of 
Baghdad on Wednesday, a police official said.

Assailants blasted the two buildings with heavy machine gun fire and 
also shot dead a traffic policeman in the city of Baqouba, said police 
1st Lt. Hassan Ahmed. The buildings house the city's offices of the 
communists and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. There was no word on 
casualties in those shootings.

In Sadr City, Iraqi forces backed by American troops raided the 
Al-Rasoul mosque in the teeming Shiite quarter, where U.S. troops 
battled followers of cleric al-Sadr last year until a peace agreement 
was struck.

Police said the raid took place occurred shortly before sunset Tuesday. 
Officials gave no reason for the raid and it was unclear how many 
worshippers remained in custody Wednesday.

An al-Sadr aide, Abdul-Hadi al-Daraji, denounced the raid as a "criminal 
act."

"This move by U.S. soldiers aims at provoking the al-Sadr movement in 
order to accuse us of sabotaging the elections and this is an ugly 
maneuver," al-Daraji said.

Al-Sadr has declined to run in the Sunday national elections, however 
some of his followers are running on tickets led by interim Prime 
Minister Ayad Allawi and one endorsed by the leading Shiite cleric, 
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.

Iraqis will choose a 275-member National Assembly and regional 
legislatures. Sunni Muslim extremists have threatened to sabotage the 
election and many Sunni clerics have called for a boycott because of the 
presence of 170,000 U.S. and other foreign troops.

On Tuesday, a video showed an American kidnapped in November pleading 
for his life as the hostage-takers pointed a rifle at his head.

In the video, a bearded Roy Hallums, 56, said he had been taken by a 
"resistance group" because "I have worked with American forces." He 
appealed to Arab leaders, including Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, to save his 
life.

Hallums was seized by gunmen Nov. 1 along with Robert Tarongoy of the 
Philippines at their compound in Baghdad's Mansour district. The two 
worked for a Saudi company that does catering for the Iraqi army. The 
Filipino was not shown in the video.

© 2005 The Associated Press.
enditem
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