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Fresh bombings in Falluja
US occupation forces have carried out bombings in the town of Falluja, which hospital sources say has injured five including children.
Military officials said in a statement on Friday that they carried out the attack at 6:33 am (02:33 GMT) on a courtyard of a house in the southwest part of Falluja.
A hospital in Falluja said it received five injured, including three children, after the bombing.
US military officials said the attack was part of its attempt to strike at suspected hideouts of alleged al-Qaida operative Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
"Based on multiple sources of intelligence, the attack targeted 10 to 12 terrorists with known ties to the Abu Musab al-Zarqawi network of foreign terrorists," US Air Force Brigadier General Erv Lessel said in a statement.
Counter-claim
But residents in Falluja, exhausted from the US bombing campaign, gave a different version of the events.
Dr Kamal al-Ani, a doctor at the local hospital, said a US warplane fired a missile that landed in the garden of a house in the Jubail neighbourhood, in southern Falluja. Associated Press Television News footage showed a massive crater beside the house.
"We were sleeping in the morning when a US missile hit our house," Saddam Jassim, the home's owner, said as he and his brother cleared debris.
"We have nothing to do with the resistance or al-Zarqawi. These are pretexts used by the US military to terrorise the people in Falluja because US soldiers are unable to face the insurgents," he said.
Family sleeping
"The Americans are lying. Let them come and search us, not hit us with bombs," said an old woman sifting through the wreckage.
"They hit us but we don't know why," she added.
Reuters Television pictures showed bloodstains on the ground in the courtyard.
Over the past month, the US occupying forces have carried out seven attacks against houses in south-western Falluja they claim have been used by Zarqawi or his supporters. Around 40 people have been killed in the attacks.
The latest bombing was carried out in coordination with Iraq's interim government, the statement said. Iraq's interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi is currently out of the country.
US marines retreated from Falluja - a focal point of resistance to the US occupation - after besieging it for three weeks in April. Since then, the US military has been limited to using missiles attacks and bombings to hit the city.
Roadside bomb
In other developments, a roadside bomb in Samarra killed two US occupation soldiers and wounded another on Thursday.
The US military said the blast killed a soldier on-the-spot while the other died later.
"One soldier died in the attack, and the second died later of wounds from the attack," the US military statement said.
The injured soldier's condition was stated to be stable.
The latest deaths brought to 664 the number of US troops killed in action in Iraq since the start of the US-led invasion in March 2004.
Samarra, 125km north of capital Baghdad, has been the scene of sporadic resistance attacks against the occupation forces.
The fiercest attack was on 8 July when a car bomb explosion killed five US soldiers and four Iraqi guardsmen.
Agencies
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/DB29C8E5-8E48-4BBE-8FF6-854E1F58271C.htm
A hospital in Falluja said it received five injured, including three children, after the bombing.
US military officials said the attack was part of its attempt to strike at suspected hideouts of alleged al-Qaida operative Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
"Based on multiple sources of intelligence, the attack targeted 10 to 12 terrorists with known ties to the Abu Musab al-Zarqawi network of foreign terrorists," US Air Force Brigadier General Erv Lessel said in a statement.
Counter-claim
But residents in Falluja, exhausted from the US bombing campaign, gave a different version of the events.
Dr Kamal al-Ani, a doctor at the local hospital, said a US warplane fired a missile that landed in the garden of a house in the Jubail neighbourhood, in southern Falluja. Associated Press Television News footage showed a massive crater beside the house.
"We were sleeping in the morning when a US missile hit our house," Saddam Jassim, the home's owner, said as he and his brother cleared debris.
"We have nothing to do with the resistance or al-Zarqawi. These are pretexts used by the US military to terrorise the people in Falluja because US soldiers are unable to face the insurgents," he said.
Family sleeping
"The Americans are lying. Let them come and search us, not hit us with bombs," said an old woman sifting through the wreckage.
"They hit us but we don't know why," she added.
Reuters Television pictures showed bloodstains on the ground in the courtyard.
Over the past month, the US occupying forces have carried out seven attacks against houses in south-western Falluja they claim have been used by Zarqawi or his supporters. Around 40 people have been killed in the attacks.
The latest bombing was carried out in coordination with Iraq's interim government, the statement said. Iraq's interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi is currently out of the country.
US marines retreated from Falluja - a focal point of resistance to the US occupation - after besieging it for three weeks in April. Since then, the US military has been limited to using missiles attacks and bombings to hit the city.
Roadside bomb
In other developments, a roadside bomb in Samarra killed two US occupation soldiers and wounded another on Thursday.
The US military said the blast killed a soldier on-the-spot while the other died later.
"One soldier died in the attack, and the second died later of wounds from the attack," the US military statement said.
The injured soldier's condition was stated to be stable.
The latest deaths brought to 664 the number of US troops killed in action in Iraq since the start of the US-led invasion in March 2004.
Samarra, 125km north of capital Baghdad, has been the scene of sporadic resistance attacks against the occupation forces.
The fiercest attack was on 8 July when a car bomb explosion killed five US soldiers and four Iraqi guardsmen.
Agencies
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/DB29C8E5-8E48-4BBE-8FF6-854E1F58271C.htm
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Iraqi fighters in Falluja, their faces hidden behind chequered cloths, have denied in a taped message that al-Qaida-linked Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was holed up in their city.
"The American invader forces claim that al-Zarqawi, and with him a group of Arab fighters, are in our city," a masked man read from a piece of paper on Friday.
"We know that this talk about al-Zarqawi and the fighters is a game the American invader forces are playing to strike Islam and Muslims in the city of mosques, steadfast Falluja."
The United States believes al-Zarqawi, accused of leading a bloody campaign of bombings and of decapitating an American and a South Korean captive, has played a significant role in the violence gripping Iraq.
On the tape, five men holding a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and machinegun said local fighters were defending their home town - sometimes known as the "city of mosques".
Bombing
US occupation forces over the past week bombed houses they said were hideouts for al-Zarqawi's fighters.
A group led by al-Zarqawi, who Washington says has links to al-Qaida, claimed responsibility for a wave of attacks in Iraq on Thursday in which at least 100 people were killed and hundreds more wounded.
In one of the attacks, scores of black-clad fighters, some wearing headbands with the name of al-Zarqawi's group, attacked a police station and other government buildings in Baquba, northwest of Baghdad.
Iraq's interim national security minister said on Thursday that Iraqi officials had good intelligence on al-Zarqawi, who this week threatened to assassinate Iraq's prime minister, and plan to pursue him after the formal transfer of power next week.
The US has offered a $10 million reward for al-Zarqawi's capture.
In April, hundreds of Iraqis were killed in Falluja in fierce fighting between Marines and guerrillas.
A truce was agreed under which Marines withdrew from the city and an Iraqi force took over responsibility for security.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8ECD9F9A-322E-44EB-97BE-1F40D5F685DA.htm
"The American invader forces claim that al-Zarqawi, and with him a group of Arab fighters, are in our city," a masked man read from a piece of paper on Friday.
"We know that this talk about al-Zarqawi and the fighters is a game the American invader forces are playing to strike Islam and Muslims in the city of mosques, steadfast Falluja."
The United States believes al-Zarqawi, accused of leading a bloody campaign of bombings and of decapitating an American and a South Korean captive, has played a significant role in the violence gripping Iraq.
On the tape, five men holding a rocket-propelled grenade launcher and machinegun said local fighters were defending their home town - sometimes known as the "city of mosques".
Bombing
US occupation forces over the past week bombed houses they said were hideouts for al-Zarqawi's fighters.
A group led by al-Zarqawi, who Washington says has links to al-Qaida, claimed responsibility for a wave of attacks in Iraq on Thursday in which at least 100 people were killed and hundreds more wounded.
In one of the attacks, scores of black-clad fighters, some wearing headbands with the name of al-Zarqawi's group, attacked a police station and other government buildings in Baquba, northwest of Baghdad.
Iraq's interim national security minister said on Thursday that Iraqi officials had good intelligence on al-Zarqawi, who this week threatened to assassinate Iraq's prime minister, and plan to pursue him after the formal transfer of power next week.
The US has offered a $10 million reward for al-Zarqawi's capture.
In April, hundreds of Iraqis were killed in Falluja in fierce fighting between Marines and guerrillas.
A truce was agreed under which Marines withdrew from the city and an Iraqi force took over responsibility for security.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8ECD9F9A-322E-44EB-97BE-1F40D5F685DA.htm
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