U.S. Missiles Kill 20 Fallujah Residents 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A U.S. military plane fired missiles Saturday into a 
residential neighborhood in Fallujah, killing at least 20 people and 
leveling houses in the restive Sunni Muslim city, police and 
residents said. 
 
It was the first significant U.S. military action in the city since 
Marines ended a bloody three-week siege against insurgents. Since the 
U.S. forces left, residents have said that extremist influence in the 
city, west of Baghdad, has only grown. 

U.S. Marines declined comment and referred queries to the U.S. 
command, which said it had no comment. 

Elsewhere, U.S. troops battled insurgents for a fourth day near the 
city of Baqouba, northeast of Baghdad, in fighting that has killed at 
least six Iraqis and one American soldier, the U.S. military and 
witnesses said. In southern Iraq (news - web sites), a roadside bomb 
killed at least two people, including a Portuguese security officer. 

In the Fallujah strike, at least two houses were destroyed and six 
others were damaged in the poor neighborhood. 

At least 20 bodies were counted, and they were taken for burial 
immediately at the city's "martyrs' cemetery in accordance with 
Islamic custom of burying the dead quickly. At least three women and 
five children were among the dead. 

Two other people died at the hospital, officials there said. 

"At 9:30 a.m., a U.S. plane shot two missiles on this residential 
area," said the Fallujah police chief, Sabbar al-Janabi, as he 
surveyed the wreckage. "Scores were killed and injured. This picture 
speaks for itself." 

It was not clear what the target was, but U.S. officials have said 
Jordanian-born terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi may be hiding in the 
city. 

Al-Zarqawi has been blamed for the string of car bombs across Iraq, 
including the Thursday that killed 35 people and wounded 145 at an 
Iraqi military recruiting center in Baghdad. 

In Fallujah, rescue workers combed the scene, searching the rubble 
for other victims. Slabs of concrete and steel reinforcing bars were 
upended and twisted, Associated Press Television News footage showed. 

Water pooled from a 20-foot-crater in front of one of the destroyed 
houses, apparently from where one of the missiles struck. One man 
displayed several Qurans burned in the strikes. 

Outraged residents accused the Americans of trying to inflict maximum 
damaged by firing two strikes � one first to attack and another to 
kill the rescuers. 

"The number of casualties is so high because after the first missile 
we jumped to rescue the victims," said Wissam Ali Hamad. "The second 
missile killed those trying to carry out the rescue." 
U.S. Marines besieged Fallujah in April after four American security 
contractors were killed in an ambush in the city and their bodies 
mutilated. 

Ten Marines and hundreds of Iraqis, many of them civilians, died 
before the siege was lifted and security was handed over to an Iraqi 
volunteer force, the Fallujah Brigade. 

The clashes northeast of the capital began Wednesday in Buhriz when 
insurgents fired on U.S. troops after they met with the mayor to 
discuss projects "designed to improve the quality of life" for local 
residents, 1st Infantry Division spokesman Maj. Neal O'Brien said. 

Buhriz is located on the outskirts of Baqouba, about 35 miles 
northeast of Baghdad, 

Clashes have continued intermittently in the Baqouba area ever since. 
One American soldier died of wounds suffered Friday in Buhriz, 
O'Brien said. 

The clashes spread Saturday to Tahrir, also near Baqouba, where 
insurgents fired rocket-propelled grenades at a U.S. patrol, wounding 
two U.S. soldiers, O'Brien said. The soldiers were evacuated to the 
31st Combat Support Hospital. 

Dr. Nassir Jawad of the Baqouba General Hospital said at least six 
Iraqis were killed and 54 were wounded in the Buhriz fighting. 
Municipal officials had said 13 Iraqis died. U.S. officials put the 
Iraqi death toll at 10 in the Thursday fighting and five on Friday. 

In southern Iraq, a roadside bomb killed at least two people, 
including a Portuguese security official working for the state-run 
Oil Products Co. and an Iraqi policeman guarding him, police Capt. 
Diaa Hussein said. 

The two were driving on a road from the southern city of Basra to 
nearby Zubayr when the blast destroyed their vehicle. One civilian 
driving behind them was also injured, Hussein said. 

It was the second attack in four days against people involved in 
protecting Iraq's oil industry. On Wednesday, gunmen killed the 
security chief of the state-run Northern Oil Company, Ghazi Talabani, 
in Kirkuk. 

Insurgents have also targeted Iraq's strategic pipeline system, 
cutting off all exports from the southern oilfields in bombings this 
week. Iraq hopes to resume partial exports this weekend. 

Exports from Iraq's other field near Kirkuk were halted last month 
due to sabotage on the pipeline to the Mediterranean port of Ceyhan, 
Turkey. 

Iraq had been exporting about 1.5 million barrels of crude oil a day 
through two southern pipelines, both of which were damaged. A 
coalition spokesman said Friday the smaller pipeline had nearly been 
repaired but full exports would probably not resume before Wednesday. 

The pipeline attacks are part of a stepped up campaign of violence in 
the run-up to the June 30 transfer of sovereignty to the interim 
Iraqi government. 

Meanwhile, New York-based Human Rights Watch said in a statement it 
would be unlawful for the United States to hold detainees, including 
Saddam Hussein (news - web sites), after the June 30 power transfer 
without charging them with crimes. 

The U.S. military has said it will continue to hold thousands of 
prisoners detained since it invaded Iraq last year and that it could 
do so legally until a "cessation of hostilities." 

"The Bush Administration can't have its cake and it too. If the 
occupation is over, so is the U.S. authority to detain Iraqis without 
criminal charges," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human 
Rights Watch. 



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