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Iraqi protesters shot dead in Amara

by alj
A confrontation between police and demonstrators in the south eastern Iraqi city of Amara has left at least seven people dead.

Hospital and police sources said six people were killed on Saturday after Iraqi policemen opened fire on a group of stone-throwing protesters.

Another Iraqi was shot dead by a British soldier.

The Iraqi police opened fire after protesters, who were demanding jobs, began throwing stones at the headquarters of the provincial government in the city. Another seven people were injured.

The US military meanwhile claimed occupation forces shot dead an Iraqi after he hurled grenades during the demonstration by the unemployed.

Highhandedness

But locals insisted no one had attacked the US soldiers and that the troops had opened fire first on the protesters, demanding the local governor find them jobs.

"At 10.45 am, one Iraqi terrorist was killed during violent demonstrations in Amara," a US military spokesman said.

Locals complained bitterly about the highhandedness of the occupation troops and the Iraqi police.

"We came here to get a job, but instead of giving us a chance they opened fire on us," a protester said.

Rampant unemployment is a scourge in Iraq and most Iraqis are growing impatient with the US-led occupation.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/3DB4DABF-E0C8-4123-8DE2-FD4FF9116B9E.htm
§US accused of Iraqi cruelty
by alj
The US-occupation army in Iraq has been slammed by a human rights group for being negligent in handing out compensations for Iraqis killed or injured by them.


Occupation Watch, an international group of peace and justice organisations set up to monitor the conduct of occupying forces in Iraq, said the process for Iraqis to make claims was purposely opaque and often their treatment by the US military bordered on cruelty.

"There is a culture of impunity," Occupation Watch's researcher Paola Gasparoli said on Saturday.

"Many of the most important cases cannot be presented or are being rejected for entirely illogical reasons," she said.

Unkept promise

After major combat was declared over on 1 May, the US military said it would hear claims from Iraqis whose family members were killed or wounded in incidents involving US troops as long as they took place in non-combat circumstances.

According to Human Rights Watch, the US military received nearly 5400 claims as of mid-September, of which 4148 had been adjudicated and 1874 denied.

The US claims it has paid out several million dollars in compensation.

But Occupation Watch insists the claims process lacks clarity.

"Sometimes soldiers know they have killed someone wrongly, so they do everything to make sure they get away with it," Gasparoli said.

Foul practices

"There have been cases in which bodies were stripped of identification and delivered to hospitals as unknowns," Gasparoli said.

"We need to work to put pressure on the US army to change the claims process and to start to take some of these claims seriously, instead of just dismissing them," the researcher argued.

Between 7900 and 9800 Iraqi civilians are said to have died in war-related causes since the invasion.

In a 30-page report covering three months of research, Occupation Watch has listed several serious cases of claims it has followed. None of these claims for compensation has been successful.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/C7999364-8618-4A68-95DD-B979BFF8DE72.htm
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