FALLUJAH, Iraq April 30 —
American troops again fired on anti-U.S. protesters in Fallujah's
streets Wednesday and said they won't give up their foothold in the
one-time Baath Party bastion. At least two were killed and 18
wounded, hospital officials reported.
In a bloodier episode Monday night, 15 protesters and bystanders
were killed, and at least 50 wounded, officials said. In both cases,
U.S. officers and the U.S. Central Command said their soldiers were
fired on first from among the crowds.
But Iraqis denied it, and no weapons or suspects have been
produced.
After Wednesday's shootings, a U.S. Army colonel said his forces
will remain here "to help the city stabilize." Residents repeatedly
said they want the Americans at least to withdraw to the city's
outskirts.
Some were threatening. "Sooner or later U.S. killers we'll kill
you," read an angry banner in English unfurled in the faces of GIs
on guard in the central city.
This week's Fallujah bloodshed, in large part the result of
clashes between a foreign force and a traditional Muslim society,
underscores the military's challenge in a land where many say they
will resist any foreign hand that tries to control them.
The resistance may be especially sharp in Fallujah, a city of
200,000 people 30 miles west of Baghdad, because it benefited
particularly from Saddam Hussein's Baath regime, toppled last month
by the U.S.-led coalition.
The regime built chemical and other factories that generated jobs
for Fallujah's workers and wealth for its businessmen. The city sent
many of its young men to elite regime forces such as the Republican
Guard and Special Republican Guard.
An indication of the city's fealty to the old regime: Air Force
Maj. Gen. Gene Renuart, Central Command's operations director, said
Monday's demonstration was apparently in celebration of Saddam's
birthday.
Wednesday's violence occurred at the climax of a march by 1,000
men protesting the earlier shootings, which took place at a Fallujah
school taken over for a time by a company of the 82nd Airborne
Division.
The marchers, mostly young men in sandals and ankle-length
dishdashas, halted on Fallujah's main avenue before a former police
compound used as an 82nd Airborne command post.
A flier they distributed denounced Monday night's shootings, in
which children were among the dead, as a "vicious and unprecedented
crime," and demanded punishment for those responsible.
Overhead in the hot, clear skies, Army Apache helicopters
circled, barely skimming the blue tile-topped minarets of Fallujah,
a Sunni Muslim city known for its many mosques.
Within minutes, the protesters were throwing stones and then
shoes some 30 yards toward U.S. soldiers hunkered down behind
sandbags in the compound. A six-vehicle U.S. Army convoy then
ventured past, between the protesters and the U.S. compound.
Suddenly gunfire erupted, though it wasn't clear from where. From
atop one vehicle, a soldier fired a mounted machine gun toward the
crowd. Other automatic fire came from paratroopers inside the
compound. The marchers, panicked, dropped their banners and fled for
the safety of side streets. Some stopped to pick up fallen
friends.
It lasted less than a minute. Doctors later said the two dead men
suffered head wounds.
American officers said someone in the crowd fired a weapon at the
convoy.
"There was gunfire by at least one person," said Lt. Col. Tobin
Green, a squadron commander in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment,
whose troops were in Fallujah to take control from the 82nd
Airborne.
Iraqi witnesses denied there was any gunfire from the crowd. "The
Americans inside the compound just fired randomly," Khazal Abdul
Hadi, 44, a marcher wounded in the leg, said from his hospital
bed.
After Monday night's bloodshed, too, officers said the American
barrage was justified return fire. "Everything was within the rules
of engagement," said Capt. Jeff Wilbur, an 82nd Airborne civil
affairs officer. "There'll be no formal investigation."
Local leaders were unsatisfied. "We asked the commanding officers
for an investigation and for compensation for the families of the
dead and injured," said Taha Bedaiwi al-Alwani, the new,
U.S.-recognized mayor of Fallujah.
At a meeting with U.S. officers, al-Alwani and local religious
and clan leaders also asked that troops be redeployed outside the
city center. In one move, the paratrooper company has left the
disputed school.
Residents told reporters they were troubled by soldiers who gaze
on Fallujah women and make seemingly rude comments, who they think
mock the way Iraqis dress, and whose goggles or binoculars have some
locals convinced they are "seeing" through curtains or clothing.
Green said the U.S. troops were here to help restore security in
the aftermath of war. At the meeting, "we provided them with some
guidance about what we intend to do to help the city stabilize," he
said.
The mayor told reporters it would be "difficult" for the
Americans to leave, but he said most residents oppose their
presence.
"Many people believe these are occupying forces," he said, "and
many of them are still cautious until they see their
intentions."
photo credit
and caption:
US soldiers guard their position
at the mayor's office in Fallujah, Iraq Wednesday April 30,
2003 minutes after US soldiers in a convoy opened fire on
anti-American protestors. U.S. troops opened fire on
anti-American demonstrators for the second time this week as
Iraqis marched Wednesday to protest the previous shooting. The
mayor said two people were killed, and a hospital
administrator said 18 were wounded. U.S. Central Command said
soldiers in a convoy passing the demonstrators were shot at,
and then returned fire. (AP Photo/Hussein
Malla)
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