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Coalition death toll in Iraq reaches 3,000
Posted by: Admin


World BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The death toll for coalition military forces in Iraq hit 3,000 Monday, according to a CNN tally.
The combined death toll includes 2,759 U.S. troops and seven American civilian contractors of the military.

Other coalition deaths include 119 British, 32 Italians, 18 Ukrainians, 17 Poles, 13 Bulgarians, and 11 Spaniards, as well as service members from Australia, Denmark, Estonia, Fiji, Holland, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Romania, Salvador, Slovakia, and Thailand.

The milestone was reached after U.S. military officials announced the deaths of five U.S. soldiers and Marines over the weekend.

Two U.S. soldiers were killed Sunday and two were wounded during fighting in Kirkuk, the U.S. military said Monday. The soldiers were assigned to 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division.

Earlier, officials announced the death of another U.S. soldier serving with Multi-National Division - Baghdad, killed late Sunday when his vehicle was hit by a bomb north of Baghdad.

Two U.S. Marines assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5 also died Sunday during combat operations in Anbar province, west of Baghdad, the military said.

In October, U.S. officials have reported 52 service member deaths, for a total of 586 this year.

The Iraqi death toll continued to rise on Monday as well.

In the latest attack, two car bombs exploded about 5:20 p.m. (10:20 a.m. ET) in northeast Baghdad, killing 20 people and wounding 17, officials said.

The first bomb obliterated a tent packed with mourners at the funeral of a father of an Iraqi police officer. Among those killed and wounded were Iraqi police officers, an official with Qudous police station told CNN. The second car bomb exploded at the same time in an outdoor market just few hundred yards away, the official said.

Monday's violence in Baghdad began shortly after sunrise.

Three people were killed and seven wounded, including six Iraqi police, when two roadside bombs exploded within 30 minutes, according to an official with Baghdad emergency police.

About an hour later, a roadside bomb attack wounded three Iraqi police as they patrolled near the University of Technology in southeastern Baghdad, police said.

Seven people, including four Iraqi police, were wounded an hour after that, when a car bomb exploded targeting another Iraqi police patrol in southeastern Baghdad, police reported.

Three Iraqi civilians died and six people, including one Iraqi soldier, were wounded in clashes Monday afternoon between gunmen and Iraqi soldiers in Midas square in northern Baghdad.

Baghdad emergency police said 26 bullet-riddled bodies were found by Iraqi police in various Baghdad neighborhoods Monday. Some bodies showed signs of torture, police said. Officials said they could not immediately identify the bodies.

In Khalis, a town near Baquba and about 50 miles north of Baghdad, gunmen opened fire on a crowd of people in a bus station Monday in Iraq, killing four and wounding three others, an official said.

In a separate attack two hours earlier on a road between Khalis and Baquba, gunmen shot into a car, killing two people, including an Iraqi police officer, and wounding another, a local official said.

Three bullet-riddled bodies, including that of an Iraqi police officer, were found by police Monday morning in Baquba.

Another three people were killed later Monday by gunmen in Muqdadiya, about 25 miles north of Baquba.

In the town of Suwayrah, south of Baghdad, at least eight people were killed and 20 others were wounded when a car bomb exploded in a busy outdoor market, the mayor said. Hospital officials said nine people were killed and another 35 were wounded in the attack.
Insurgent group wants to negotiate

In a videotape obtained by CNN Sunday, one of Iraq's most visible insurgent groups repeated an offer to negotiate with U.S. forces.

In the professionally produced videotaped message, the speaker -- whose face is obscured -- offers a set of conditions which he says could lead to an end to the group's ongoing insurgency and peace with U.S. occupation forces.

The speaker is believed to be Ibrahim al-Shimary, a spokesman for the Sunni insurgent group called the Islamic Army of Iraq.

In the video, he sets two critical conditions for ending the insurgency -- a timetable for withdrawal of U.S. troops, and a formal recognition of the Iraqi insurgency as a party to any talks.

"America and Iran are occupying Iraq. America is the disease which caused the symptom which is the Iranian occupation, but today, the symptom has become more dangerous than the disease," the speaker says in the video.

The message came as Iraqi police found 83 bodies over the weekend, an official with Baghdad emergency police said.

The official said 51 bullet-riddled bodies were found in Baghdad, with some of the bodies showing signs of torture. Iraqi police could not immediately identify the bodies.
Other developments

# Iraq's government indefinitely postponed a much-anticipated national reconciliation conference Sunday, according to The Associated Press. In announcing the postponement, the Ministry of State for National Dialogue said only that the gathering, which was planned for Saturday, had been put off for "emergency reasons out of the control of the ministry," according to AP.

# A Sunni insurgent coalition is calling for a separate Islamic state in parts of Iraq's capital and in other provinces with a large Sunni population, according to a statement posted on an Islamic Web site Sunday. On Wednesday, Iraq's parliament approved a law that would allow the country's 18 provinces to hold referenda on merging with other provinces to create a federal region.
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