Suspected leaders of al Qaeda in Iraq captured
U.S.: One of men may be linked to Egyptian envoy's killing

(CNN) -- U.S.-led coalition forces have captured two alleged leaders
of the insurgent group al Qaeda in Iraq, including a man suspected in
the death of an Egyptian envoy, an American military spokesman said
Thursday. 

Troops caught Khamis Farhan Khalaf abd al Fahdawi, also known as Abu
Seba, on Saturday in Ramadi, west of Baghdad, after intelligence led
them there.

Abu Seba reportedly is a senior lieutenant for` Jordanian-born 
militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and is suspected in this month's 
attacks on Bahraini and Pakistani diplomats and the killing of Ihab
al-Sherif, who came to Iraq to be Egypt's ambassador. (Full story)

Al-Sherif was kidnapped in Baghdad on July 2, and the Egyptian 
government confirmed his death five days later. (Full story)

In addition, forces detained Abdulla Ibrahim Muhammed Hassan al 
Shadad, also known as Abu Abdul Aziz, on Sunday in Baghdad. He 
reportedly is the leader of al-Zarqawi's operations in the Iraqi
capital and a key officer for the insurgent group.

The U.S. spokesman said the arrests and recent raids yielded evidence
and equipment implicating the men in al-Zarqawi's leadership cell.

Al-Zarqawi's group has claimed responsibility for car bombings, 
kidnappings and beheadings in Iraq.

The United States has posted a $25 million reward for information
leading to al-Zarqawi's capture. He has been described as the most
wanted man in Iraq.

Suicide blasts at Green Zone
A double-suicide bombing targeted a checkpoint to Baghdad's heavily
fortified Green Zone on Thursday, killing one person and wounding five
others, police said.

A suicide car bomber struck at around 8:45 a.m. (12:45 a.m. ET),
followed seconds later by a bomber wearing a vest packed with
explosives.

Among the wounded was a potential third suicide bomber, police said --
 a critically wounded man outfitted with a suspected explosive device
that had not detonated.

Police discovered wires coming from the wounded man's clothing as they
began to move him. He was isolated while an explosives team came to
disarm the device.

The U.S. military said the man ran after the second bomber detonated
and Iraqi police shot him before discovering the explosives vest.

Two police officers were among the wounded.

The Green Zone is the seat of Iraq's government and U.S. operations.

In other violence Thursday, gunmen attacked a checkpoint near the
headquarters of the Iraqi Police Major Crimes Unit in western Baghdad,
killing two police officers and wounding four others.

Thursday's attacks come on the heels of a suicide car bombing the day
before in the Iraqi capital that killed 27 people -- many of them
children.

The bomb went off near a U.S. military convoy as soldiers were 
handing out treats to children in eastern Baghdad's al-Jaddeda 
neighborhood.

Iraqi police said most of the dead were children.

The U.S. military said at least seven children and an American 
soldier were killed and three soldiers were wounded. The attack also
left 20 people wounded.

Since the start of the war, 1,756 U.S. troops have died in Iraq.

In another suicide attack, a bomber detonated explosives Tuesday
inside a Sunni mosque in Jalawlah, about 50 miles (80 kilometers)
southeast of the eastern city of Baquba, killing two people and
wounding 16 others, police said.

The bomber was wearing an explosives-packed vest, a police official
said.

Jalawlah is an ethnically mixed town of Kurds and Arabs.

Detainee deaths investigated
The Iraqi interior minister expressed outrage Wednesday at reports on
the deaths of detainees in the custody of Iraq's special police
commandos.

The circumstances of the deaths are not entirely clear, but police
sources said 12 Iraqis were locked in a police van for several hours
and nine of them may have suffocated.

"I will not tolerate any human rights abuses by any member of the
Ministry of Interior forces," the minister, Baqir Jabbur, said in a
written statement. "Any person or persons who are found to be guilty
of such behavior will be fired and punished to the fullest extent
allowed by law."

Police officers were suspended and taken into custody pending a full
investigation, Jabbur said.

Police commandos had arrested 12 Iraqi men at a Baghdad hospital on
Sunday and taken them into custody, police sources said. The men had
brought an injured comrade to the hospital after a skirmish between
insurgents and Iraqi and U.S. forces in Baghdad, sources said.

The commandos returned to the hospital later Sunday with the bodies of
nine of the men and three others who were unconscious, police sources
said.

CNN's Enes Dulami, Kevin Flower, Odai Sadik, Barbara Starr and 
Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.








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