BAGHDAD, Iraq March 28 —
Iraq claimed Friday that coalition forces attacked civilian areas
throughout Iraq and had killed 75 and injured 290 as they pressed
the invasion of Iraq.
Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf said the
casualty figures were for action Thursday. He told reporters in
Baghdad that coalition leaders should be tried for war crimes for
their repeated attacks on public buildings.
"The Americans and the British have repeated that they target
government buildings like there aren't humans in government
buildings ... as if government buildings have no link to civilians,"
he said.
Sahhaf also denounced speculation that the Iraqi forces would use
chemical weapons speculation that arose after advancing coalition
forces found chemical weapons suits and gas masks left behind by
soldiers in retreat.
He said having such equipment was standard procedure for any army
including those of Britain and the United States.
He argued that coalition troops may use such weapons in
desperation.
"We do not rule out that the American and British aggressors, as
a result of strong frustration and defeat because of the great
resistance that is increasing day by day ... that they will become
hysterical," he said. "They possess all kinds of weapons of mass
destruction. It is possible they will commit a lot of follies."
Iraqi forces struck and destroyed or damaged 33 American or
British vehicles, including 12 battle tanks and the vehicle of the
commander of the convoy. He said four soldiers died in the convoy
attack near Najaf.
One tank hit by an rocket-propelled grenade fired by a peasant.
Another peasant shot down a helicopter, he said.
Sahhaf described Richard Perle's resignation as chairman of the
Pentagon advisory group as an indication of divisions and disputes
among U.S. military planners. Perle, 61, had been a vocal advocate
of going to war against Iraq.
Sahhaf called Perle as "Zionist donkey."
photo credit
and caption:
An Iraqi farm worker walks
Thursday, March 27, 2003 through the remains of a building
that was struck by artillery shells and missiles Wednesday in
the Al Usfiya farming complex, about 10 miles south of Baghad.
Iraq's health minister said 36 civilians were killed and 215
wounded in U.S. airstrikes on Baghdad a day earlier, and he
accused U.S.-led forces of deliberately targeting civilians.
The U.S. military denied it had targeted civilians. (AP
Photo/Ali Heider)
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