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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Iraq
UPDATE: Businessmen were behind kidnapping of Romanian journalists
2005-10-17
BUCHAREST- A wealthy Romanian-Syrian businessman and his American-Iraqi associate are accused of organising the kidnapping of three Romanian journalists in Iraq in March, a judicial source said. The Romanian-Syrian Omar Hayssam organised the abduction with his business partner Mohamed Munaf, an American of Iraqi origin, according to extracts of an indictment detailing the charges published by the Mediafax news agency. The Romanian justice ministry announced it was taking steps to extradite Munaf, who is in the custody of US authorities in Iraq. Hayssam was arrested in Bucharest in May when his role in the abduction came to light. The abduction would have allowed Hayssam to transfer large sums of money abroad at a time when he was under scrutiny for his business dealings, according to the indictment. Hayssam contacted Munaf to prepare the abduction of Marie Jeanne Ion and Sorin Miscoci of the Prima TV channel and Ovidiu Ohanesian of the daily Romania Libera, on the ground in Iraq. He then employed a "cell specialising in abductions" in Baghdad to carry it out. The cell later refused to release the hostages and Munaf as agreed. The hostages were held for 55 days before being released following negotiations. No ransom was paid. It later emerged that the hostages were held in the same place as the French journalist Florence Aubenas, who was held for five months after being abducted last January while reporting for the French daily Liberation.
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Europe
France paid US$8 million ransom for kidnapped journos
2005-08-02
France paid millions of dollars for the release of three journalists kidnapped in Iraq and its foreign intelligence service now knows the identity of the abductors, a reporter who was himself held hostage in Lebanon in 1987 said on Monday in a magazine interview. Roger Auque told the August-September issue of Afrique Magazine that - despite official denials - the French government had paid $6m to free Liberation newspaper correspondent Florence Aubenas and her Iraqi interpreter in June. Two other French journalists who had been released last December, Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot, were handed over in exchange for $2m, Auque said, relying on what he described as "a reliable source" for his information.

Officers in DGSE foreign intelligence service "have identified the abductors and the place they had been held", said the journalist, who has written a book about his own captivity at the hands of Hezbollah. "In the basement of the DGSE in Paris the cellphone numbers of the abductors and their photos are stuck on a wall next to a map of Iraq," he said. "Kidnappers never say at the start that they want money. They prefer to depict themselves as a political or religious movement. Then they make it understood that all that costs a lot of money and that financial help would be welcome. A figure is then suggested," he told the magazine.
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Africa: North
Leader of Algerian Salafi Movement Urged Al Zarqawi to Kidnap French Citizens in Iraq
2005-07-04
Chesnot and Malbrunot ("the pal of the arabs") : 6 millions dollars (alleged); Florence Aubenas : 15 millions dollars (alleged); the next one : ???
Note that the last permanent french journalist in Iraq (working for a communist paper) was expelled at the request of french authorities... that's a shame, she was safe, she "never left her hotel", as she acknowledged...


By Bu 'Allam Ghemrasah

Algeria, Asharq Al-Awsat- French diplomats living in Algeria asserted that the French government is concerned about a possible alliance between the Algerian fundamentalist organization, Salafist Group for Call and Combat and Al-Qaeda in Iraq led by Abu Musab Al Zarqawi. According to the sources, the alliance will target French citizens who live in Iraq and French interests in general all over the world. French diplomats expressed the concerns of their intelligence services to Asharq Al Awsat saying that the Algerian Salafist Group for Call and Combat wish to integrate with global Jihad.
I think Dan posted that about six months ago...
According to the French sources, intelligence reports say that there has been communication between the Algerian group, the most active now in Algeria, and Al-Zarqawi who was the leader of the Tawhid and Jihad group before he became committed to Bin Laden and became the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq.
Reading back over Rantburg the past few years, it's pretty obvious that Zarq was affiliated with AQ almost from the first. I think the name change was merely a matter of going public. I'll admit that things were simpler in those days, since anybody with "Tawhid" in their names who boomed stuff could be assumed to be him...
The French security agencies have information that communication between the two parties intensified since Abdel Malik Daroqedel (Abu Musab Abdel Wadoud) took over leadership of the Algerian Group in the autumn of 2004 succeeding Mustafa Abu Ibrahim (Nabeel Sahrawi) who was killed by the Algerian army in East Algeria. Confirming the ties between the two groups, French Security refers to a letter from Abu Musab of Algeria to Abu Musab of Iraq in which the former requests the latter to intimidate the French government by kidnapping a potentially large number of French hostages in Iraq.
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Iraq-Jordan
Al-Qaeda claims Kirkuk attacks
2005-06-15
At least 40 people died in violence in Iraq on Tuesday as Kurds in the autonomous north swore in former rebel leader Massoud Barzani as their first president.

The United States military said a rocket-propelled grenade killed one soldier and wounded two more in Baghdad, bringing US military deaths since the 2003 invasion to 1 698, according to a tally based on Pentagon figures.

In the deadliest attack on Tuesday, a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of civil servants waiting for paychecks at a branch of Al-Rafidain bank in the northern oil city of Kirkuk, killing at least 20 people, police said. Another 81 were wounded.

A statement posted on the Internet in the name of the al-Qaeda-linked Ansar al-Sunna group said it carried out the attack against the "infidel" police.

It warned potential recruits: "We will follow you everywhere, whether you are wearing military fatigues or civilian clothes."

The bombers struck shortly before Barzani was sworn in as Kurdish president in nearby Arbil and targeted a bitterly contested city that the Kurds want as capital of an expanded autonomous region.

North of Baghdad, another car bomb killed 10 more Iraqis, including two children, and wounded seven, security and hospital sources said.

Troops had been called in to reinforce a police station in the town of Kanaan that was under mortar attack, a police officer said. They were hit by the car bomb parked nearby.

Near Ramadi, US troops killed five Iraqi civilians and wounded four others on Tuesday, believing their car to be a bomb, a US military statement said.

The deaths followed a car bomb attack at their military checkpoint that had killed an Iraqi soldier and wounded another, it added.

"Regrettably, there were five civilians killed and four wounded as a result of their vehicles' charging the entry control point."

In the northern city of Arbil, Barzani, son of the Kurdish nationalist hero Mullah Mustafa Barzani, was sworn in as president before the 111-member regional assembly.

"I promise to safeguard the accomplishments of Kurdistan and to carry out my duties faithfully," Barzani told the gathering, which included Iraq President Jalal Talabani, who headed a rival Kurdish rebel group.

A giant portrait of Barzani's father watched over the assembly, flanked by red, white, yellow and green Kurdish flags.

In Baghdad, an Iraqi court set up to try Saddam Hussein promised to release more footage of the questioning of the ousted president and his top aides. A video released on Monday showed him answering questions.

But a leading lawyer charged that the video release was politically motivated.

"The current charged political climate makes it imperative to comfort people that Saddam will not come back and that his trial is ongoing," said Abdul Majid al-Sabawi, professor of law at Baghdad's Mustansiryah university.

The bearded, seemingly weary Saddam was questioned about the 1982 killing of 143 residents of Dujail, a Shi'a village north-east of Baghdad.

Saddam, who has been in US custody since his capture in December 2003, is accused of ordering revenge murders after villagers there allegedly tried to assassinate him.

He is also accused of a litany of other crimes against humanity and could face the death penalty if convicted.

In Kuala Lumpur, Iraq unveiled a 10-year plan to more than triple oil production to six million barrels per day by 2015, saying it would need 20 billion dollars in foreign investment to do so.

Recruitment agencies in Manila said more than 2 000 Filipinos had slipped into Iraq to work for US military camps despite a Philippine government ban imposed last year.

The New York Times reported that despite denials, UN chief Kofi Annan was apparently told of efforts by his son's employer to win an oil-for-food contract with Iraq in 1998, according to a memo written by a company executive.

And Annan has urged US-led forces in Iraq to help the new Baghdad government search for Kuwait's lost national archives, plundered by Iraq after the 1990 invasion of its neighbour.

Meanwhile, Florence Aubenas, the French journalist released in Iraq on Sunday after more than five months in captivity, told fellow reporters she had been kept in a tiny basement with virtually no room to move.

Romanian Prime Minister Calin Tariceanu confirmed in an interview on French television late on Tuesday that his country's secret services had worked to free Aubenas and her Iraqi translator Hussein Hanun.

Sources in Bucharest said that Communist-era spies, called back into service by the Romanian government, had helped France negotiate the release.
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi Blogger: Chirac's Gov Pays $75 Million for release of Journalist
2005-06-14
The French TV Channel 5 stated today that a ransom of 75 millions US Dollars was paid to Haiyat Ulama Moslemen of Hareth Al-Thari to release the French journalist Florence Aubenas. The TV stated that this ransom was paid to save Jacque Chirac in the next election. FA was kidnapped in Jan 2005 by one of the terrorists group which has a link with Al-Thari group. Althari is like the God-father for the terrorists groups and the outside negotiations with the kidnappers always occur through him and his group. Today the Iraqi forces and US forces raid his house and found arms but he was not there. Many times this man and his son and his group stated that they got strong link with the terrorists groups and they pay a great respect and support for Zarqawi.
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Iraq-Jordan
Still More Bad News from MSNBC
2005-06-13
BAGHDAD, Iraq - The military announced the killing of four more U.S. soldiers over the weekend, pushing the American death toll past 1,700 -- more than double what it was a year ago. Since last June 13 -- when 825 members of the U.S. military had died in Iraq -- the insurgency that took shape with the fall of Saddam Hussein has increased its toll on American forces and Iraqi soldiers and civilians alike. When the toll gets to the number of innocent Americans killed in one day 4-1/2 years ago, somebody let me know.

Separately, Reuters reported that a senior U.S. diplomat survived on Monday when a suicide car bomber struck a U.S. military convoy in Baghdad. The report cited several police sources although the U.S. embassy said it was unaware of the incident. A spokesman for the Iraqi Islamic Party, a major Sunni Muslim grouping, said the official had just left its compound in western Baghdad when the explosion went off. Talking to the Sunnis and almost got wacked? A leak, perhaps?

A snippet of good news. Iraq has fulfilled a number of key goals set by the Bush administration, including historic elections, a new government and the drafting of a new constitution. But the deaths continued.

In the volatile town of Tal Afar where a U.S.-Iraqi offensive to rout terrorists has been launched, three mortar rounds missed an Iraqi army barracks and landed on a house Sunday, killing a 6-year old child, police Capt. Amjad Hashim said. The motar rounds came from un-named Heroes of the Islamic Revolution, I guess.

In one of Sunday's bright spots, the French journalist Florence Aubenas and her Iraqi assistant Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi returned home after five months in captivity. Hoo-ray! A journalist was freed!
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Europe
French Journalist Florence Aubenas Freed in Iraq
2005-06-13
Story noted yesterday, but ST's comments warmed my heart :-)
French Government denies that it paid ransom amid celebrations as journalist flies home to Paris
That's why it's in the sub-head.
PRESIDENT CHIRAC led a national outpouring of relief yesterday after the release of Florence Aubenas, a French journalist, and Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, her Iraqi assistant, after 157 days of captivity in Iraq. Mme Aubenas, 44, a reporter with Libération, the left-leaning newspaper, ...
as if there's any other kind,
... returned to Paris on a French military aircraft last night. M Chirac greeted her with a kiss on the cheek.
Eeeew.
Looking thin but relaxed, Mme Aubenas recalled being held in a cellar in "difficult conditions", tied up and with little water. She told of being unbound recently and of being allowed to watch French television. She was moved to see a news summary marking her 140th day of captivity. "You're so happy to see that," she said.

She provided no information about the identity of her kidnappers and no details about her release.
Mm-hmm.
Why ST, you sound suspicious.
Antoine de Gaudemar, managing editor of Libération, said: "We are completely swept away with joy. It's a huge relief after five months of nightmare." Jacqueline Aubenas, the journalist's mother, said: "I thought I knew what the word happiness meant. That was nothing — it's much better than I thought." M Chirac called her on Saturday with the news but asked her to keep quiet.

Mr al-Saadi, 42, was driven to his family in Baghdad, where relatives and friends danced and slaughtered a Shia sheep in his honour.
That's just what I do, just as soon as me and 40 of my closest friends fire willy-nilly into the air with automatic weapons.
There were suggestions that M Chirac authorised the payment of a ransom to the kidnappers who were holding Mme Aubenas and her guide. Robert Menard, the secretary-general of the press freedom lobby group Reporters Without Borders, said that the hostage-takers had demanded $15 million (£8.3 million) within weeks of the disappearance of the journalist on January 5. However, the French Government denied that a ransom was paid. "There was absolutely no demand for money. No ransom was paid," Jean-François Cope, a spokesman, said.
Nothing to see here, move along!
I'd start looking for some wealthy terrorists with nice, shiny new weapons.
Analysts say that the French authorities are unlikely to have paid the full $15 million demanded by the gang that kidnapped Mme Aubenas and Mr al-Saadi.
Well sure, the French always know how to bargain at a market ...
In December two other French journalists, Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot, were freed after four months as hostages in Iraq. In their book on their ordeal, they said that the "going rate" for securing a Westerner's freedom was about $2 million.
Boy, Italy sure got hosed on the Giuliana Sgrena deal.
Bernard Bajolet, the French Ambassador to Iraq, said that the journalist and her assistant, who spent their first night of freedom on Saturday in a secure embassy building, were in good health and high spirits.

In France a national campaign, spearheaded by the media, kept "Florence and Hussein", as they were known, in the headlines and the Government under pressure. The DGSE, the French intelligence agency, which led the ransom rescue efforts, is believed to have established contact with a credible intermediary capable of transmitting the kidnappers' demands, and the French responses, within the past month. The agency will question Mme Aubenas over the next few days.
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Iraq-Jordan
Joy Sweeps France as Journalist Returns
2005-06-13
French journalist Florence Aubenas and her Iraqi interpreter returned home to emotional welcomes yesterday after they were released from a five-month hostage ordeal in Iraq, triggering a joyful wave of relief across France and beyond. Aubenas, a 44-year-old senior reporter for the newspaper Liberation, was being flown back to Paris on a small French air force jet due to arrive today. Her interpreter, Hussein Hanun, was driven to his Baghdad home in a French embassy car, and was immediately embraced by his crying wife and family. The pair were "in good health," President Jacques Chirac said in a televised address after French officials announced the release. "On behalf of everyone, I want to express to Florence Aubenas and Hussein Hanun our happiness and that of the entire nation to know that they are free," he said.
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Europe
Top European Muslim calls for journo release
2005-06-11
One of the Muslim world's most influentual figures in Europe called Friday for the unconditional release of a French journalist who was kidnapped in Baghdad five months ago, as well as a prompt withdrawal of US and other foreign military forces in Iraq.

Sheikh Hussein Halawa, secretary general of the European Council for Fatwa and Research, said he was ready to go to Iraq if necessary to secure the release of Florence Aubenas. Aubenas, a senior correspondent for the French newspaper Liberation, and her interpreter Hussein Hanun al-Saadi went missing after leaving the journalist's hotel in Baghdad on January 5. "I must say that I am very much against the captivity of the French journalist," Halawa, speaking in Arabic through an interpreter, told AFP in Dublin on the 155th day of Aubenas's disappearance. "I would like to state that this is against the Islam that I believe in and I call on them to release her and all the captives they have taken." Halawa felt confident that his appeal would be heard by the kidnappers, five days after a similar plea was sent out from Saudi Arabia by Sheikh Abdullah Ibn Bayya, vice president of the International Organisation of Ulema and a member of the European Council for Fatwa and Research. "After the call made by Sheikh Ibn Bayya, and after my call today, I think this will touch their hearts (those of the hostage takers) and that they will soon release the captives," he said.

Halawa said the overall situation in Iraq, more than two years after the US and British invasion that overthrew Saddam Hussein's regime, remains "very painful," and he urged foreign military forces to leave as soon as possible. "I call on people in Iraq to renounce fanaticism and tribalism and come together and unite," he said. "I also call on the occupying forces to leave Iraq. The day they leave Iraq, then the people of Iraq can unite, I trust the Iraqi people and I think they can look after themselves and manage their own affairs." Referring to the Aubenas case, Halawa said: "I think the kidnapping has a negative impact on those who don't understand the true image of Islam. But there are a lot of people who do understand the true image of Islam and are still taking these kind of actions," he added.
Doesn't miss much, does he?
"I call on those who have kidnapped to take into consideration the fact that this is not in harmony with Islam, and also to think of the Islamic Dawa and the Muslims who have good relations with people of different parts of Europe. Such a behaviour is not good with regard to the Muslim relations with the European people who have opened their lands to Muslims. This is against Islam as a religion. We condemn this and we condemn all kinds of violence all over the world."

Based in Ireland [ ! ], the European Council for Fatwa and Research is a private foundation, created in 1997, that brings together more than 30 Muslim religious leaders, jurists and other prominent figures living in Europe, the Middle East, Mauritania, Pakistan and Sudan.
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Iraq-Jordan
Captors 'poised to free Wood'
2005-05-19
DOUGLAS Wood is alive and will be freed "at any time" according to French negotiators working alongside the Australian hostage team in Baghdad.

The French connection was revealed as Australian mufti Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilaly checked out of his Baghdad hotel room and headed to Dubai to treat a heart condition.
The sheik's spokesman said he would later return to Iraq.

"We believe he's alive and will soon be free," a French source outlined to The Daily Telegraph yesterday.

The breakthrough comes as Prime Minister John Howard said yesterday he had no official confirmation Mr Wood, 63, was alive or would be released.

The armed militants holding the Australian engineer are also holding French journalist Florence Aubenas, who was kidnapped in January.

A high-powered Australian government hostage negotiating team turned to Paris for help after it became clear that the Wood case was following a similar pattern to an earlier French hostage drama.

The Australian team has been in daily contact with the French embassy and its large team of Arabic-speaking diplomats who are plugged in to Baghdad's shadowy political and religious scene.

Two French journalists were freed late last year after France's top mufti negotiated directly with the Sunni sheik who controls the group holding Mr Wood, the Shura Council of the Mujahideen of Iraq.

A substantial "charitable donation" from the Wood family has also been made to help secure the release after the hostage team was told by the French that a similar donation clinched the deal to free the two journalists.

The French mufti also left Baghdad yesterday after finalising plans for the release of Ms Aubenas who is held by a group closely associated with Mr Wood's captors.

It is understood the French charity Medicins Sans Frontiere has played a central role in the negotiations.

Like Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilaly, the French Muslim leader spoke with Ms Aubenas, who suffers from diabetes, and left Baghdad with assurances that she would soon be released.

Authorities now expect the captors, who are associated with a powerful Iraqi Sunni sheik, to release both hostages in the near future.

Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilaly has spoken to the same Sunni contacts as the French Muslim leader.

"They are not held by an al-Qaeda group and no ransom has been demanded so they should be okay," a source with the French revealed to The Daily Telegraph.

Mr Wood's Canberra-based family was last night nervously waiting for any news and knew nothing about the latest reports.

Mr Wood has been held for almost three weeks after being kidnapped in Baghdad where he was operating a small engineering company.

He lives in California and is married to an American, Yvonne Given.
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Iraq-Jordan
French daily director in Baghdad to con West find reporter
2005-03-13
BAGHDAD — The founding director of France's left-leaning newspaper Liberation arrived in Baghdad on Friday to try to contribute to efforts to find kidnapped reporter Florence Aubenas.
These commie tricks are getting a little old.
Serge July said he would use the working visit to the Iraqi capital, which is being coordinated with the French embassy in Baghdad, to explain through the Iraqi media the growing Europe-wide campaign for Aubenas's release.
Which consists of a lot of talk. Ya know, if you only had troops on the ground in Iraq ...
Aubenas, a senior correspondent for Liberation, and her Iraqi interpreter, Hussein Hanun Al Saadi, vanished after leaving her Baghdad hotel on January 5. July started his mission by visiting Saadi's family.
Then he had lunch, smoked a cigarette, sipped some really nice wine, and took a nap.
Last week, the unidentified abductors released a video which showed the Frenchwoman looking gaunt and dishevelled, begging for help.
Nope, not doing nuttin' for me at all.
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi judge on the Saddam case murdered
2005-03-02
A judge on the special tribunal that will put Saddam Hussein and members of his former regime on trial was assassinated Tuesday in the Iraqi capital, according to an Iraqi police official and a media report.

Judge Barwez Mohammed Mahmoud and a relative were killed in northern Baghdad's Azamyiah district, the official told The Associated Press early Wednesday on condition of anonymity.

Al-Arabiya, the Dubai-based satellite TV news network, reported that the judge and his son died in the attack. The network said the men were killed near their house in northern Baghdad. The New York Times reported that the son, Aryan Mahmoud, was a lawyer with the tribunal.

The assassination came as thousands of mostly black-clad Iraqis protested outside a medical clinic in Hillah, a city 60 miles south of the capital where a suicide car bomber killed 125 people a day earlier.

The protesters, braving the threat of another attack as they waved clenched fists, condemned foreign fighters and chanted ``No to terrorism!''

Police prevented people from parking cars in front of the clinic or the hospital, where authorities blocked hospital gates with barbed wire to stave off hundreds of victims' relatives desperate for information on loved ones.

Insurgents, fighting both American forces and the Iraqi government, released a video Tuesday of French journalist Florence Aubenas, 43, kidnapped nearly two months ago. The 43-year-old correspondent for the French daily Liberation appeared alone in front of a maroon-colored background, pleading for help.

The video of the French journalist, who disappeared Jan. 5, was dropped off at the Baghdad offices of an international news agency. There was no indication of when the tape was made.

``Please help me, my health is very bad,'' she said in English. ``Please, it's urgent now. I ask especially Mr. Didier Julia, the French deputy, to help me.''

Julia, a lawmaker from French President Jacques Chirac's governing party, led a botched effort to free two French reporters taken hostage in Iraq last year. Those reporters have since been released.

The judges on the special tribunal have not even been identified in public because of concerns for safety, but Mahmoud was apparently the first one to die in Iraq's insurgency. Officials with the Iraqi government and the Iraqi special tribunal couldn't be reached before dawn Wednesday for comment.

Mahmoud's role on the tribunal was unclear, but the law establishing it called for up to 20 investigative judges and up to 20 prosecutors. It also said the tribunal would have one or more trial chambers, each with five judges.

The killings came just one day after five former members of Saddam Hussein's regime - including one of his half brothers - were referred to trial for crimes against humanity.

The announcement Monday by the tribunal marked the first time that the special court issued referrals, similar to indictments, which are the final step before trials can start.

Saddam was captured in December 2003, and others have been in custody for nearly two years.

U.S. military officials transferred 12 of the top defendants to Iraqi custody in June with the handover of sovereignty. They're being held at an undisclosed location near Baghdad International Airport, west of the capital.

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's terror group, which has repeatedly seized foreigners and attacked Americans, purportedly claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing in Hillah. It was not possible to independently verify the claim, which was posted on the Internet.

The group said it targeted recruits for the Iraqi security services, whom it referred to as ``apostates,'' but did not mention those killed in a nearby market. The car bomb went off at a site where police and army recruits were lining up for physicals exams at the medical clinic.

In Hillah, relatives and friends screamed and wailed as they gathered around lists of the dead and wounded that were posted on hospital walls. Relatives who came to identify the dead placed corpses into coffins and loaded them onto pickup trucks to take them away for burial.

Fears that insurgents would target Shiite mourners forced authorities to cancel an elaborate funeral procession for some of the victims of Monday's attack, the deadliest since the insurgency began two years ago.

``I am afraid there might be a suicide bomber among the demonstrating crowd,'' said 30-year-old Ahmed al-Amiry. ``It's very possible.''

But anxieties over another attack did not prevent more than 2,000 people from gathering outside the clinic Tuesday, shouting ``No to terrorism!'' and ``No to Baathism and Wahhabism!'' and demanding the resignation of interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi.

Wahhabism was a clear reference to foreign fighters who are supporters of al-Qaida and adherents of the strict Wahhabi form of Islam, which is the version practiced in Saudi Arabia. The Jordanian-born Zarqawi, the country's most feared terrorist, claims to be affiliated with Osama bin Laden's organization.

The Baath party was the political organization that ran Iraq under Saddam Hussein.

Although Monday's attack was directed at recruits, most of the victims were Shiites. Insurgents have increasingly targeted gatherings of Shiites, who make up 60 percent of Iraq's population, in an apparent effort to start a sectarian war.

The Shiites have refrained from striking back, mostly at the behest of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who wants nothing to impede the Shiites from gaining political power in Iraq.

Nominally disbanded Shiite militias could easily field thousands of tough and effective fighters that could deal a crushing blow to the insurgency. But Shiite leaders will also have to allay the fears of Sunnis, who dominated the Iraqi political system under Saddam and make up 20 percent of the population.

With a slight majority of 140 seats in the 275-member parliament that was elected on Jan. 30, the main Shiite clergy-backed United Iraqi Alliance sent its candidate for prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, north to Irbil to negotiate for the support of the Kurds. The alliance needs Kurdish support to build the two-thirds parliamentary majority to elect a president and nominate the prime minister.

One of the most important challenges for the incoming government will be the ongoing violence and the difficulties in training an Iraqi army capable of taking over from American troops.

The deaths Monday of two U.S. soldiers in a vehicle accident in Beiji, 155 miles north of the capital, reported by the military Tuesday, brought the number of deaths among the U.S. military to at least 1,499 since the beginning of the Iraqi war, according to an Associated Press count.
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