News, December  2003, www.aljazeerah.info

 

ÇáÌÒíÑÉ

Home

News Archive

Arab Cartoons

News Photo

Columnists

Documents

Editorials 

Opinion Editorial

letters to the editor

Human Price of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine

Islam

Israeli daily aggression on the Palestinian people 

Media Watch

Mission and meaning of Al-Jazeerah

Peace Activists

Poetry

Book reviews

Public Announcements 

   Women in News

Cities, localities, and tourist attractions

 

 

 

Al-Jazeerah Info Center needs your support

 to continue providing you with this free service

Send donations by check to: Al-Jazeerah Info Center, P.O. Box 724, Dalton, GA 30722-0724, USA.

or through PayPal, using credit cards or bank transfers

 

New Iraqi Army Pay Under Review After Mass Walkout 

Naseer Al-Nahr, Asharq Al-Awsat

Arab News

BAGHDAD, 14 December 2003 — The US-led coalition was reviewing the pay scale for the New Iraqi Army yesterday after some three hundred soldiers walked out on the fighting force’s first battalion. Meanwhile, a US soldier died and two more were wounded in a roadside bomb attack.

In Washington, President George W. Bush yesterday presented Saddam Hussein’s ouster as part of a “year of accomplishment,” but omitted any mention of the unconventional weapons at the core of his case for war in Iraq. In a weekly radio address detailing his administration’s record in 2003, Bush played up positive economic news, the passage of a prescription drug benefit for the elderly, and funding for global efforts to combat AIDS.

In Baghdad, the US military said it was considering a salary increase for Iraqi soldiers after the coalition announced Thursday soldiers had quit the new army’s first battalion.

“The cause of the problem that we are facing right now in that first battalion is based on pay,” Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez told reporters. “We’re working to review the pay scales at this point and I think we’ll have some decisions in the coming weeks.”

Meanwhile, Sanchez said attacks on coalition soldiers had fallen to around 20 per day. November had proved to be the deadliest month for US soldiers, with 79 soldiers killed, since Saddam Hussein was ousted last spring.

The latest US fatality came early Friday when a military convoy was hit by a roadside bomb in the flashpoint town of Ramadi, a military spokesman said yesterday.

One soldier died after being rushed to a combat hospital. Two others were wounded.

In Saddam’s hometown of Tikrit, US soldiers from the 4th Infantry Division gunned down late Friday an Iraqi man after soldiers said he opened fire on them from a car just outside a US military base.

Also yesterday, relatives of Iraqis detained by US forces in the prison at Abu Gharib, infamous in Saddam Hussein’s times as a center of torture and death, demanded visiting rights. Demonstrators gathered outside the main entrance to the jail claiming their loved ones were innocent.

Each one had a story to tell of betrayal, revenge or misfortune. Meanwhile, a senior officer in the 4th ID was relieved of his command and fined $5,000 after being found guilty of assaulting and threatening an Iraqi detainee in August, the military announced yesterday. Lt. Col. Allen West was the most senior officer reported to have faced a military judicial hearing in Iraq.

 
Earth, a planet hungry for peace

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in the West Bank, like a Python (Alquds, 1/25/03.

Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.

editor@aljazeerah.info