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Outraged Iraqis Condemn Killings By Foreign Guards

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  • Outraged Iraqis Condemn Killings By Foreign Guards

    OUTRAGED IRAQIS CONDEMN KILLINGS BY FOREIGN GUARDS

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 10 2007

    BAGHDAD (AFP) - Outraged Iraqi authorities on Wednesday condemned the
    killing in Baghdad of two women by foreign security guards but the
    Australian-run firm that hired the contractors defended their actions.

    "The government and the prime minister and everybody categorically
    condemns the actions of this company," the head of Baghdad security,
    General Qassim Mussawi, said in a statement.

    Tuesday's shooting came just days after Iraq vowed to punish US firm
    Blackwater when a probe found that its guards opened "deliberate" fire
    in another incident in Baghdad three weeks ago, killing 17 civilians.

    Witnesses to the latest shooting, in Karrada neighbourhood, said a
    woman taxi driver mistakenly got too close to a convoy of Dubai-based
    Unity Resources Group (URG) and came under immediate gunfire by
    the guards.

    The taxi driver, an Armenian Christian identified as Maroni Ohannes,
    49, and a female passenger died of gunshots to the head. Another woman
    passenger was wounded in the shoulder, while a child was injured by
    flying glass.

    Several witnesses reported barrages of gunfire, and a policeman who
    witnessed the shooting said that after blazing away at the car the
    foreign security guards sped off "like gangsters."

    Commenting on the incident, Unity said "the first information that we
    have is that our security team was approached at speed by a vehicle
    which failed to stop despite an escalation of warnings which included
    hand signals and a signal flare.

    "Finally shots were fired at the vehicle and it stopped. Unity is
    now working with the Iraqi authorities to determine the outcome of
    this incident.

    "We deeply regret this incident."

    A small group of the dead women's grieving relatives gathered for
    their funerals at the Armenian Church in central Baghdad on Wednesday.

    "The incident is a barbarous crime," said one sobbing relative,
    Kasbar Boghos. "Those guards are inhuman. They have no pity nor do
    they have any religion."

    Another, Kevork Armelian, judged the shootings a "crime against
    humanity."

    "We call on the Iraqi government to put an end to this," Armelian
    told AFP. "It was clear that women were inside the car when they
    opened fire haphazardly and deliberately.

    "We demand the expulsion of the company so that others can learn a
    lesson. The Australian government when sending envoys should teach
    them human rights -- not how to kill innocent people."

    The US State Department, whose personnel Blackwater had been escorting
    during the earlier incident on September 16, has denied any link
    between the latest shooting and the American government.

    However, it has emerged that Unity was returning to its headquarters
    after transporting members of RTI International, a company under
    contract to the US government agency USAID, when the two Iraqi women
    were killed.

    "No RTI staff members were involved or present when the incident
    occurred. Unity was not transporting RTI personnel at the time.

    "They had completed a transportation mission and were returning to
    their base of operations," Patrick Gibbons, the group's communications
    director, told AFP, while confirming RTI personnel had just been
    dropped off.

    RTI is a non-profit organisation involved in training Iraqis in local
    government management and administration.

    "USAID does not direct the security arrangements of contractors,"
    US embassy spokeswoman Mirembe Nantongo told AFP.

    "Contractors are contractually responsible for the safety and well
    being of their employees," she said, adding that the State Department
    was in contact with the Iraqi authorities about the shooting.

    Iraq's government said on Monday that it was determined to rein
    in private security contractors operating in the war-torn country
    following the Blackwater shooting, which an Iraqi report said was
    unprovoked.

    "We have set strict mechanisms to control the behaviour of the
    security companies and their conduct in the streets," interior ministry
    spokesman Abdul Karim Khalaf said.
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