Elsewhere, one U.S. soldier from Task Force Baghdad was killed and two
others were wounded Sunday afternoon in a roadside bombing north of the
capital, the U.S. command said. No further details were released.
Fourteen attackers also died in the clash that broke out about 10:30 p.m.
in Mahawil, 50 miles south of Baghdad, police Capt. Muthana Khalid Ali said.
The dead included five Iraqi national guardsmen and 17 policemen, he said.
Earlier Sunday, the multinational command said two Iraqi national guard
soldiers were killed and three more injured in a rebel ambush in the same
area.
Two rockets also exploded near Baghdad International Airport and a third
slammed into an Iraqi national guard building in a western suburb. No
casualties were reported.
The attacks were the latest sign that insurgents are stepping up attacks
against Iraq (news
- web
sites)'s fledgling security forces, which the United States hopes can
assume a greater role in fighting the rebels once a newly elected government
takes office.
The latest attacks and kidnappings raise new concerns about security
following a brief downturn in violence after the Jan. 30 elections, when
Iraqis chose a new National Assembly in the first nationwide balloting since
the fall of Saddam Hussein (news
- web
sites) in April 2003.
A final tally is expected by Thursday, but initial returns point to a
landslide by Shiite Muslim candidates endorsed by their clerics. Shiites are
believed to comprise about 60 percent of Iraq's 26 million people.
On the other hand, many Sunni Arabs, estimated at 20 percent of the
population and the core of the insurgency, are believed to have stayed home,
either out of fear of rebel reprisal or because of a boycott call by Sunni
clerics.
The four Egyptians were seized early Sunday near the Mansour district of
western Baghdad, Egyptian and Iraqi officials said. They worked for Iraqna, a
subsidiary of the Egyptian firm Orascom Telecommunications, which operates the
mobile phone network in Baghdad and central Iraq.
Six other Egyptians working for Iraqna were kidnapped in two separate
incidents in September. All were ultimately freed although Orascom said at the
time that it was committed to continuing its work in Iraq.
No group claimed responsibility for the latest abduction. On Friday,
Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena was kidnapped by gunmen who blocked her car
outside Baghdad University. Sgrena, 56, is a veteran reporter for the
communist daily Il Manifesto.
Her colleagues appealed Sunday to her captors to free her, citing the
journalist's anti-American stance and saying that holding her would damage the
image of Iraq.
"Her articles in Il Manifesto have always expressed opposition to the
occupation war led by the United States," her colleagues said in a statement
to Al-Jazeera television. "Keeping her captive and hurting her would amount to
seriously damaging the cause of Iraq before the eyes of the world."
A group calling itself the Islamic Jihad Organization claimed Friday to
have kidnapped the woman and gave Italy 72 hours to withdraw its troops from
Iraq. But it made no threats to kill her or say what would happen if its
demands were not met.
The purported kidnappers said in a statement posted Sunday on the Internet
that they still were interrogating Sgrena and had given Rome a final warning
to withdraw its troops from the country.
Sunday's statement, released in the same group's name, described Sgrena as
an "Italian POW," and said her fate "will be announced by us in the near
future."
The statement could not be verified and did not elaborate on her possible
fate.
Earlier Sunday, a Web message appeared that was signed by the Jihad
Organization. It threatened to kill Sgrena by Monday unless Italy agrees to
withdraw its troops.
It wasn't clear if both statements came from the same group, given that the
names were different. Neither statement included a picture of the woman or
other evidence to support the claims.
Two other foreigners � Brazilian engineer Joao Jose Vasconcelos Jr., and
French journalist Florence Aubenas � were believed kidnapped last month.
Al-Jazeera aired a claim of responsibility for Vasconcelos by a group that
showed his identification cards. No group has claimed responsibility for
kidnapping Aubenas.
More than 190 foreigners have been taken hostage in Iraq since the U.S.-led
invasion in March 2003, and some have been beheaded on graphic videos
distributed on the Web or to Arab television stations.
The wave of abductions subsided after U.S. and Iraqi troops stormed the
insurgent bastion of Fallujah, 40 miles west of Baghdad, last November,
discovering what U.S. officials termed "hostage slaughterhouses."
However, the abductions of five foreigners in Baghdad within three days
raised fears of a new wave of kidnappings.
Separately, an Iraqi civilian was wounded Sunday by a roadside bomb that
exploded but missed an Iraqi police patrol in the southern port city of Basra,
police said.
Attackers gunned down an Iraqi contractor who apparently worked with the
U.S. military, and police in the Shiite city of Karbala reported that a
suicide car bomber struck a U.S. convoy south of the city Sunday morning,
destroying a U.S. vehicle. No casualties were reported.
Elsewhere in the city, gunmen fired rifle shots at a gasoline tanker truck,
and the vehicle exploded into a huge ball of fire. No one was hurt, said
police Capt. Mushtaq Talib, adding that the tanker was heading to an illegal
port used by oil smugglers in the city.
In another attack, gunmen fired on a group of Iraqi policemen working to
dismantle a roadside bomb on a main street in central Baghdad, injuring two
officers, a police official said.