U.S. Soldier Killed in Baghdad's Sadr City

Pro-Gaza Rally Hit By Bomber in North

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By Jim Heintz
Associated Press
Monday, December 29, 2008

BAGHDAD, Dec. 28 -- A roadside bomb killed a U.S. soldier in Baghdad's Shiite slum of Sadr City on Sunday, and an Iraqi was killed when a suicide bomber riding a bicycle blew himself up amid a mass rally against Israel's airstrikes on Gaza.

The two attacks were demonstrations of the violence that still flares up in Iraq as the government prepares to take responsibility for security from the U.S. military in a few days.

A spokesman for the U.S. military, Army Capt. Charles Calio, said the soldier was killed by a roadside bomb that targeted an American convoy. He said there were no other casualties and the name of the soldier was being withheld pending notification of family.

In the northern city of Mosul, 16 people in a crowd of about 1,300 protesters were wounded in an attack in the city center, a police officer said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the news media.

U.S. and Iraqi forces continue to battle al-Qaeda in Iraq and other insurgent groups in Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city, where economic and political problems persist. The issues are complicated by Kurdish-Arab tensions in the city.

Also Sunday, police in Fallujah said a bomb exploded on the outskirts of the city, killing two civilians and wounding four others.

A police officer, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the bomb exploded in a parking lot where farmers and other merchants gather to buy and sell goods. Calio, the U.S. military spokesman, confirmed the casualty toll but added that the bomb targeted a police patrol.

Iraq's government condemned Israel's airstrikes on Gaza, which began Saturday.

Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, said condemnation didn't go far enough.

"Expressing condemnation and denunciation for what is going on against our brothers in Gaza and expressing solidarity with them by words only doesn't mean anything in the face of the big tragedy they are facing," he said in a statement released by office in Najaf.

"Now more than at any other time, both Arab and Islamic nations are required to take a practical stance for the sake of stopping this repeated aggression and to break the unfair besieging of these brave people," the statement said, without giving details of the proposed stance.

Also Sunday, Iraq's presidential council signed off on a resolution allowing thousands of British and other non-U.S. troops to stay in the country past New Year's Eve. The approval comes days before the Dec. 31 expiration of a U.N. resolution that gave troops legal authority to operate in Iraq.

The law allows about 4,000 British troops and smaller contingents from Australia, El Salvador, Estonia and Romania to remain until the end of July 2009.



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