Al-Qaida video shows police execution (Agencies) Updated: 2005-01-02 08:53
Al-Qaida's arm in Iraq released a video Saturday showing its militants lining
up five captured Iraqi security officers and executing them in the street, the
latest move in a campaign to intimidate Iraqis and target those who collaborate
with U.S.-led forces.
Also Saturday, a U.S. soldier belonging to the Task Force Baghdad was killed
and another was wounded in a roadside explosion north of the capital, the
military said. No other details were given.
In a surprise visit to northern Iraq, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Richard
Armitage met Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani to discuss this month's crucial
elections, Kurdish officials said.
 A member of
the Iraqi National Guard wearing a balaclava visits his wounded comrade
Hussein Karim, 34, in Baghdad's Yarmouk hospital, Saturday, Jan. 1, 2005.
Karim and another Iraqi Guardsmen were wounded in insurgent attacks in
Youssifiya, Iraq, just south of Baghdad, on
Saturday.[AP] | Ethnic Kurds, who make up
about 20 percent of Iraq's 26 million people, are eager to take part in the Jan.
30 vote for a national assembly so that they can play a large role in the
drafting of a new constitution and carve out broad autonomy in the future Iraq.
The United States has sought a unified Iraq and does not want the Kurds pushing
for independence — something that Iraq's neighbor Turkey, with a large Kurdish
population of its own — would reject.
A statement posted on an Islamist Web site along with the video denounced the
five security officers as "American dogs" and warns other Iraqis they would meet
the same fate if they join the security forces. In the video, the five men are
seen lined up, their hands bound behind their backs, and shot in the back on a
street in front of passers-by.
Insurgents have carried out a string of attacks focusing on Iraqi armed
forces in recent weeks, aiming to wreck security ahead of the elections.
Guerrillas have proven increasingly adept at managing the Internet as part of
their propaganda campaign against the United States and its ally, the government
of Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, posting technically proficient footage of attacks
on convoys and military bases, as well as executions of members of the Iraqi
security forces or government officials.
The U.S. military and the interim government in Baghdad want the Iraqi police
and National Guards to provide security for the election, and mass desertions
from those forces could scuttle such plans.
The video and statement — issued by al-Qaida in Iraq, the group led by
Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi — did not say where the executions took
place, but separate photos of the executions indicated they occurred in the
insurgent stronghold of Ramadi, west of Baghdad, on Dec. 26.
In the footage, one of the prisoners identified himself as Lt. Bashar Latif
Jassim and said his mission was to "prevent terrorists from entering Iraq."
When asked by one his captors — who did not appear on camera — who the
terrorists are, Jassim said: "Those who sabotage the country."
The five prisoners, wearing civilian clothes, were shown sitting on the
ground with five masked gunmen behind them, one reading a statement. A banner
emblazoned "al-Qaida in Iraq" hung in the background.
"Here is another bunch of apostates in the land of Iraq, another group of the
doomed soldiers who came to the blessed jihad land of Ramadi to support the
apostate Allawi government and help the unjust American enemy," said the man
reading the statement.
"As usual, jihadists have no mercy when it comes to such infidel souls," he
said.
The video then showed the execution. After the men fell to the ground, the
gunmen kicked them to see who was still alive, then pumped more bullets into the
bodies.
People and cars are visible in the video, passing by during the shooting, and
some even stop to watch. One of the masked shooters left a paper, apparently a
statement, on the back of one of the bodies.
In a separate statement posted on the Web on Saturday, al-Zarqawi's group
also claimed responsibility for a number of attacks targeting security forces
around Iraq earlier in the week. In one of the bloodiest days in recent months,
militants killed some 20 policemen on Tuesday in attacks in various Iraqi
provinces.
The group also said it was behind an attack on American post in Samarra the
same day. The U.S. military had said three militants were killed in that
operation, but al-Qaida claimed that two were only injured. The statement said
al-Qaida in Iraq was behind the attacks, which it said were part of a larger
operation called "Killing the Mercenary Dogs."
In the southern province of Najaf, security forces captured 11 people who had
allegedly crossed illegally crossing into the country from Saudi Arabia, police
Lt. Bahaa al-Jazaeri said. The men, three of whom were Saudi citizens, were
carrying explosives and advanced telecommunications equipment, he said.
Meanwhile in Baqouba, 30 miles northeast of Baghdad, gunmen killed the head
of the city council, Nawfal Abdul-Hussein al-Shammari, said Abdullah al-Jbouri,
governor of Diyala province, of which Baqoubah is the capital.
Elsewhere, a roadside bomb struck an Iraqi National Guards patrol south of
Mahmoudiya, a town about 25 miles south of Baghdad, killing a guardsman and
wounding six others.
In Baghdad's western neighborhood of Adl, police found two beheaded bodies on
a main street Saturday, witnesses said. Police said they couldn't identify the
victims.
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