http://www.presstelegram.com/Stories/0,1413,204~21474~2618605,00.html

Two Iraq al-Qaida operatives captured

Article Published: Saturday, December 25, 2004 - 3:34:51 PM PST

 

Turkish businessman reported kidnapped; blast toll rises.

By Bassem Mroue

Associated Press

 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. forces captured two senior figures in al-Qaida's branch
in Iraq, the U.S.

military said Saturday, and one of Turkey's richest businessmen was reported
kidnapped, appearing in

a video along with a weeping employee saying they were being held hostage.

In Baghdad, police uncovered more bodies under the rubble after a suicide
bomber blew up a gas

tanker in an upscale Baghdad district, bringing the death toll in the Friday
night attack to at

least nine people.

 

The video of the two Turkish hostages was the first report of a kidnapping
of foreigners in Iraq in

weeks and it appeared the abduction netted one of the most high-profile
victims yet.

 

Kahraman Sadikoglu is the president of the Istanbul-based Tuzla Shipyard and
is famed in Turkey for

having renovated and saved from ruin the "Savarona' one of the world's
largest yachts, once used by

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey.

 

Sadikoglu appeared in the video, aired on Turkish television, alongside
Ahmet Yurtdas, the captain

of one of his ships. No kidnappers appeared in the footage or issued any
statement claiming

responsibility and no demands were made. The video's authenticity could not
be confirmed.

 

"Today is Dec. 23. We were captured four or five days ago," Sadikoglu said.
"We're fine and they

will check us out, what we're doing here, and will hopefully release us. God
is Great."

 

Sadikoglu said he was working for the United Nations and the Iraqi
government on a project clearing

harbors of sunken ships. "We don't have any problems with the Iraqi
government, we're creating jobs

and food for the Iraqis," he said. "If that is a crime too, then we will
accept the punishment."

 

The two men had not been heard from since they left the southern Iraqi city
of Basra by land on Dec.

16, according to their families.

 

Several Turkish newspapers said a ransom demand of $25 million had been
made, but Foreign Ministry

officials and family members of the hostages refused to confirm the reports.

 

More than 170 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq this year, and at least
34 of them including

seven Turks have been killed by their captors. Besides the two Turks in
Saturday's video, at least

four foreigners are known to still be held, three of them Americans.

 

The U.S. Marines said Saturday they captured two men who led cells in Anbar
province for Jordanian

terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's Al-Qaida in Iraq network. The province is a
center for the

insurgency and home to the cities of Ramadi and Fallujah.

 

A Marines statement identified the men as Saleh Arugayan Kahlil and Bassim
Mohammad Hazeem. Their

cells kidnapped and executed 11 Iraqi National Guardsmen, carried out car
bombings and other attacks

in the Ramadi area and "smuggled foreign terrorists into the country," the
Marines said.

 

"This group is responsible for intimidating, attacking and murdering
innocent Iraqi civilians, Iraqi

police and security forces, and business and political leaders throughout
the Unbar province," the

statement said.

 

Al-Zarqawi's group, once known as Tawhid and Jihad, recently changed its
name to Al-Qaida in Iraq

and pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network. It has claimed
responsibility for

numerous deadly attacks against U.S. troops and government forces.

 

Violence has persisted across Iraq despite the U.S. military's offensives
last month aimed at

putting down insurgents in several hotspots including their stronghold
Fallujah, which U.S. forces

captured.

 

Friday night, a suicide bomber detonated a butane bas truck in the upscale
Mansour district near the

Libyan and Moroccan embassies, hours after Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld left the capital,

ending a one-day visit to speak to U.S. troops.

 

Rescuers on Saturday uncovered seven more bodies under the rubble of one of
three houses wrecked in

the blast, bringing the toll to nine Iraqis. At least 14 people were
seriously wounded by the

explosion.

 

The escalation in violence has come in the run-up to national elections
scheduled for Jan. 30. While

majority Shiites have embraced the polls as a chance to assert their
numerical strength, radical

elements within the minority Sunni community are leading the campaign to
prevent the vote.

 

In other violence Saturday, a car bomb exploded as a U.S. military convoy
was passing through the

southern town of Ein al-Nus, killing three Iraqis and wounding two, police
said.

 

Gunmen shot dead Hasan Abdul-Ghani al-Rubaei, a professor at Baghdad
University's medical school, as

he drove his car along the dangerous Haifa street where militants often
launch attacks.

 

And a roadside bomb exploded Saturday near the car of the governor of
eastern Diyala province,

wounding four of his guards, officials said.

 

Governor Abdullah Rashid al-Jbouri was unharmed in by the blast in the town
of Khan Bani Saad,

halfway between Baqouba and Baghdad, said Dr. Abdullah Mohammed of the
Baqouba General Hospital.

 

More displaced residents of Fallujah returned to inspect their devastated
homes Saturday, the third

day that authorities have allowed some citizens back into the city.

 

Repatriating the tens of thousands of people who fled Fallujah before the
U.S. assault in November

is a key step in the attempt to restore stability in the city ahead of
January elections.

 

Some complained the strict security measures imposed by the government and
U.S. troops on the

returning refugees.

 

"Every two hours, they are letting one car pass through the checkpoint,"
complained a man who

identified himself only as Hassan. "And there are so many checkpoints and
measures before we can get

into the city, such as sniffing dogs and mirrors being put under our cars."

 

On Thursday and Friday, a total 1,404 residents returned to their homes in
the Andalus district of

Fallujah under the supervision of government and U.S. forces, a Marine
statement said.

 

 



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