U.S. shoots 11 in Iraq

Wed May 21, 2008 5:38pm BST
 
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BAGHDAD (Reuters) - The U.S. military said its troops shot dead 11 militants in eastern Baghdad on Wednesday, but police and several residents said at least some of the dead were civilians killed by U.S. snipers.

There were conflicting accounts of the shootings in different parts of the Obaidi district close to Sadr City, the main stronghold of anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr where Iraqi troops backed by tanks have launched an operation to take control of the streets.

The U.S. military said all those killed were members of "special groups", military jargon for rogue units of Sadr's Mehdi Army militia accused of receiving funding and training from Iran.

In the courtyard of one house in Obaidi, a Mehdi Army bastion, black-robed women wailed over the bloody corpse of a man half-covered by a blanket, while men beat their chests in a sign of grief.

"He was shot by an American sniper. He was loitering outside the house. He was not even holding a piece of wood," one of the male mourners told Reuters.

An official at police headquarters in eastern Baghdad said 11 bodies had been removed from Obaidi, including three elderly men, two street cleaners and three Mehdi Army fighters.

He blamed U.S. snipers for the killings.

A number of residents and an Interior Ministry official said the shootings were triggered by a roadside bomb attack on a U.S. and Iraqi convoy, but the U.S. military said there had been no such attack on its forces in the area.

U.S. military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Steve Stover said the 11 had been killed after they were observed by U.S. soldiers acting suspiciously. He did not say whether sniper teams had carried out the shootings.  Continued...

 
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