UMM QASR, Iraq April 1 —
Two Iraqi soldiers who said they were sent on a suicide attack
mission to the country's largest port have turned themselves in to
British troops, the British commander said Tuesday.
"We had two suicide bombers turn themselves in yesterday because
they didn't want to be suicide bombers any more," Col. Steve Cox,
commander of the Royal Marine Commandos running Umm Qasr, told
reporters. "We are accommodating them."
The pair had no explosives in their possession when they
surrendered, Cox said, adding that they were turned over to British
military intelligence for interrogation and would be treated as
enemy prisoners of war. He did not give any details about the
alleged plans for a suicide attack.
Coalition forces have been on heightened alert for suicide
attackers since one posing as a taxi driver detonated a bomb that
killed four U.S. Army soldiers Saturday at a checkpoint farther
north.
Iraqi Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan pledged more suicide
attacks would follow and called Saturday's "just the beginning."
Iraq has said thousands of Arab volunteers ready for martyrdom have
come to Iraq since the start of the war.
Umm Qasr is one of the few fully pacified towns inside Iraq and
is vital to supplying the rest of the country with humanitarian aid
because it is the only large seaport.
Local Iraqis are increasingly informing British sources of the
whereabouts of officials from Saddam Hussein's ruling Baath party,
Cox said.
Thirty-five party officials are in custody, and three to four
more remain at large, Cox said.
The town of 30,000 people was plagued by pockets of resistance
until several days ago, but is now safe enough for troops and
ordinary civilians to walk around at night, Cox said. He added that
there has been no recent guerrilla activity.
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