Menteri Irak Allawi tetap memerintah hancurkan para pejuang Irak, 
menunjukkan dia tidak ingin adanya kebersamaan, penyelesaian dan 
pembangunan demokrasi Irak.

wassalam,

-------------------------------------------------------
Iraq Announces Emergency Powers Laws 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The Iraqi government issued a long-anticipated 
package of security laws Wednesday to help crush insurgents, 
including a provision allowing interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi to 
impose martial law. 

As the plan was announced, masked gunmen battled Iraqi forces in 
central Baghdad, and at least four people were killed. Mortars landed 
near a residence used by Allawi, and Iraqi police also defused a 
massive car bomb elsewhere in the capital. 

The new laws give Allawi the right to impose curfews, to conduct 
search operations and detain individuals with weapons, once he 
receives unanimous approval from the Presidential Council. They also 
give him the right to assign governors, including military leaders, 
in specific areas, and they empower him to freeze the assets of 
suspects and monitor their communications. 

Allawi signed the law earlier in the day, officials said. 

"The lives of the Iraqi people are in danger, they are in danger from 
evil forces, from gangs of terrorists," said Human Rights Minister 
Bakhityar Amin, who compared the new law to the U.S. Patriot Act. 

The Presidential Council is made up of a president, who is a Sunni 
Arab, and two vice presidents � a Kurd and a Shiite. Shiites, Sunnis 
and Kurds are the three main groups in Iraq (news - web sites). 
Allawi is a Shiite. 

Justice Minister Malik Dohan al-Hassan said the premier would need to 
get warrants from an Iraqi court for each step and said martial law 
could only be declared for 60 days or for the duration of the 
specific violence, whichever was shorter. 

"We realize this law might restrict some liberties, but there are a 
number of guarantees," al-Hassan said. "We have tried to guarantee 
justice and also to guarantee human rights." 

The law was needed to combat the insurgents who are "preventing 
government employees from attending their jobs, preventing foreign 
workers from entering the country to help rebuild Iraq and in general 
trying to derail general elections," he said. 

That danger was underscored by the violence Wednesday. Insurgents 
waged a running gunbattle with Iraqi forces in the streets near 
Martyrs' Square, the Interior Ministry said. At least two people were 
hurt, witnesses said. U.S. soldiers joined the fighting against the 
insurgents, a witness said. 

Health Ministry official Saad al-Amili said four people were killed 
and 20 injured in the battle. 

U.S. armored personnel carriers moved to the scene of the fighting on 
the deserted Haifa street as two Apache helicopters hovered overhead. 
Interior Ministry officials said the helicopters fired on nearby 
buildings. 

In another Baghdad neighborhood, four mortar rounds shook a 
neighborhood near the headquarters of Allawi's political party, 
wounding six people, an Interior Ministry official said. The attacks 
on a stretch of Zeitoun Street in central Baghdad also hit near a 
home used by Allawi, who was not there, the official said. 

The assault marked the second time Allawi's party, the Iraqi National 
Accord, was targeted. In the days before U.S. officials handed over 
power to Allawi's interim government on June 28, insurgents overran 
the offices of the Iraq National Accord in Baqouba, an insurgent 
hotspot north of the capital, Baghdad. No one was hurt in that 
assault. 

Iraqi police also defused a car loaded with 1,650 pounds of 
explosives Wednesday that was parked near the al-Iman mosque in the 
Karada neighborhood in downtown Baghdad, according to police Col. 
Adnan Hussein. 

Later, another explosion shook the terminal at Baghdad International 
Airport. There was no immediate word on damage or casualties. 

Amin said the new security law was needed to combat insurgents who 
are "preventing government employees from reporting for work, 
preventing foreign workers from entering the country to help rebuild 
Iraq and in general trying to derail general elections." 

But officials also emphasized the checks built into the new laws to 
allay fears that they could give Allawi dictatorial powers 
reminiscent of the deposed regime of Saddam Hussein (news - web 
sites). Amin said the human rights and justice ministries would form 
a joint body to monitor all areas of the country where the emergency 
laws were declared and would investigate any allegations of human 
rights violations. 

A senior U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, 
said the law will not detract from the efforts of coalition forces. 

"We'll still be able to go out and do our mission," the official 
said. "There may be a requirement or need for increase of 
coordination with specific rules and specific measures that are going 
to be put in place by the Iraqi government." 

The U.S. military has been handing over security responsibilities to 
Iraqi police and national guard forces, which are largely ill-
equipped and ill-trained to handle such duties alone. 

Allawi and his government had delayed the announcement of the law on 
several occasions, suggesting some disagreement within the Cabinet 
over its provisions. 

On Saturday, Allawi's spokesman, Georges Sada, suggested guerrillas 
who fought the Americans before the sovereignty transfer could be 
eligible for amnesty because their actions were legitimate acts of 
resistance. 

However, the deputy prime minister for national security, Barham 
Saleh, said the Cabinet was discussing an amnesty offer and was 
deliberating how to give "people an opportunity to reintegrate within 
society" while at the same time "remaining firm against people who 
have committed atrocities and have committed crimes against the 
people of Iraq and against the coalition forces that have come to 
help us overcome tyranny." 

Amin also read out a list of foreign Arab fighters arrested in the 
country for taking part in the insurgency. They came from Saudi 
Arabia, Syria, Jordan, Yemen, Egypt, Palestinian territories, 
Morocco, Turkey, and Iran. 

He said one detainee, a Moroccan he identified as George Bin Baqi, 
was arrested at the Jordanian-Iraqi border with the son of Saddam's 
half brother, Mohammed Barazan al-Tikriti. He gave no other details. 

Also Wednesday, Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's group 
claimed responsibility for an attack on U.S. forces in western 
Baghdad earlier this week, according to a statement posted on an 
Islamic Web site. 

The military wing of al-Zarqawi's Tawhid and Jihad group claimed 100 
of its fighters attacked U.S. forces on Monday in al-Saqlawiya, 43 
miles west of the Iraqi capital. 

The statement did not say how many American soldiers were killed. 

The U.S. military on Tuesday announced that three Marines assigned to 
the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force were killed while on duty in 
western Iraq. Two died in action Monday in Anbar province, while a 
third died of his wounds later Monday. 

Another four U.S. Marines were killed Tuesday in the province during 
security and stability operations, the U.S. military said. 

The United States is offering $25 million for information leading to 
al-Zarqawi's capture. He is believed to be behind a series of 
coordinated attacks on police and security forces that killed 100 
people last month. 

His followers have also claimed responsibility for the beheading of 
American Nicholas Berg and South Korean Kim Sun-il. 

An armed vigilante group, calling itself "Salvation Movement," 
threatened Tuesday to kill al-Zarqawi for insurgency attacks that 
have killed Iraqis, the first internal threat against the Jordanian 
militant. 

(LEADS with 6 grafs to correct that approval is needed from 
Presidential Council, sted Cabinet, ADD more details, such as 
freezing assets, monitoring communications, makeup of council; 
changes byline.) 



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