Witnesses said a hail of bullets from occupation forces on
Thursday turned the vehicle into a ball of fire.
Iraqi policeman Fuad al-Hamdani said four civilians were killed
in the unprovoked attack.
People have been leaving Falluja following major US airstrikes
on the town, 50km west of Baghdad.
No one was able to
explain why soldiers fired at the vehicle and the US military said it had yet to
receive information on any incident in the area.
Aljazeera's correspondent in Falluja, Abd al-Adhim Muhammad,
said 24 Iraqis were wounded during the US bombardment on
Wednesday night.
Siege escalating
Residents have reported sporadic bombings but said there had
been no resumption so far of the massive artillery barrage and air strikes
that shook the city of 300,000 on Wednesday.
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Explosions and fires kept
Falluja illuminated on Wednesday
night |
None the less, US commanders
around Falluja have been appealing for more firepower.
The Pentagon, in a reversal of policy favouring lighter units,
said it was sending dozens of main battle tanks and other armoured vehicles.
ِAbout two dozen heavy M1A1 Abrams tanks will attempt to end the
siege within days.
Appeal for calm
But UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan appealed to US President
George Bush to show restraint in Falluja.
"The more the occupation is seen as taking steps that harm the
civilians and the population, the greater the ranks of the resistance grows,"
Annan told a news conference in New York.
Occupation forces have
surrounded Falluja since the public killing there of four US security guards.
Hundreds of Iraqis have died in the ensuing attempt to wipe out
resistance in the town, with some doctors putting the toll at around
600.