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Iraqi officer killed as figures show violence down

Iraqi policeman kills wife and toddlers in rage
Amara, Iraq (AFP) May 1, 2011 - An Iraqi policeman was arrested on Sunday after gunning down his wife and three toddlers in a fit of rage, claiming that the infants were "not my children," police and a doctor said.

Ghalib Hamish Noayim killed his family inside their home at around 5:00 am (0200 GMT) on Sunday before walking to a nearby police station in the southern city of Amara, Maysan province, to turn himself in.

"He told police when he was arrested, 'Those children are not my children'," said police First Lieutenant Ali Hussein. He did not immediately give further details on the case.

A police official who did not want to be named said Noayim was in hysterics when he gave himself up.

Saadun al-Alak, a doctor at Amara's al-Sadr general hospital, told AFP: "This morning, we received four dead bodies -- a woman who was shot in her head and chest, and three young children who were shot in their abdomen."

Hussein said Noayim's wife, who was 30 years old, could only be identified by her initials A. G. H. because of local traditions barring the publication of her full name.

The three children killed were two boys, aged four and six months, and one girl aged three.

by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 1, 2011
A senior security officer was shot dead at a construction site in north Iraq on Sunday as new figures showed the number of people killed in violence last month declined by around 15 percent.

Lieutenant Colonel Nawzad Abdulqader al-Talabani's murder in the flashpoint city of Kirkuk was the latest in a spate of killings targeting senior military and civilian officials, with just months to go before US forces withdraw from Iraq completely.

Talabani was a Kurdish security force officer who was part of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's private office in Sulaimaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan's second biggest city. The officer was a member of the president's tribe.

Gunmen driving a blue Toyota Corolla drove up to a construction site that Talabani was visiting in south Kirkuk, got out of the vehicle and shot him dead before fleeing the scene, Kirkuk city police chief Brigadier General Adil Zain al-Abidine said.

Abidine added that the two attackers had threatened to kill all of the workers at the construction site, as well as Talabani's lone bodyguard, if they tried to help the security officer before killing him.

Ali Mohsen, a doctor at the city's morgue, said Talabani was shot in the head and neck.

Kirkuk is at the centre of a tract of disputed territory claimed by both the central government and Kurdish regional authorities.

US officials have persistently said the unresolved row is one of the biggest threats to Iraq's future stability.

Talabani's murder brings to at least eight the number of senior military and civilian officials who have been killed in the past two weeks in Iraq, while three others have narrowly escaped death.

Also on Sunday, a police first lieutenant was killed when gunmen armed with kalashnikov rifles attacked a checkpoint in the main northern city of Mosul at around 5:30 pm (1430 GMT), a local police official said.

While attacks have declined dramatically across Iraq since their peak in 2006 and 2007, violence remains common.

Figures compiled by the ministries of health, interior and defence and released on Sunday showed that a total of 211 Iraqis -- 120 civilians, 56 policemen and 35 soldiers -- died as a result of attacks in April.

Sunday's figures were around 15 percent lower than the monthly toll for March, when 247 Iraqis were killed.

A further 377 people were wounded last month: 190 civilians, 97 policemen and 90 soldiers. The figures also showed that 49 insurgents were killed and 199 arrested in April.

The toll was released one day after the US military confirmed a soldier was killed in southern Iraq, the 11th death in April, making it the deadliest month for US forces since November 2009, according to an AFP tally based on data compiled by independent website www.icasualties.org.

Around 45,000 US soldiers remain stationed in Iraq. While they are primarily charged with training and equipping their local counterparts, they can return fire in self-defence and still take part in joint counter-terror operations with Iraqi forces.

They must all withdraw from Iraq by the end of the year, according to the terms of a bilateral security pact.



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IRAQ WARS
Iraq monthly death toll falls in April
Baghdad (AFP) May 1, 2011
The number of Iraqis killed in violence in April fell by around 15 percent compared with the previous month, according to figures released on Sunday. A total of 211 Iraqis - 120 civilians, 56 policemen and 35 soldiers - died as a result of attacks in April, the monthly data compiled by the ministries of health, interior and defence showed. Sunday's figures were around 15 percent lower ... read more







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