BAGHDAD, February 4 (Xinhuanet) -- A total of four people were
killed when warplanes of the United States and Britain bombed
northern
Iraq on Monday morning, an Iraqi military spokesman said.
The
spokesman told the official Iraqi News Agency that at 11:45
a.m. (0845 GMT),
U.S. and British planes bombed "civil"
installations in the Mosul city of
the northern Neineva Province.
Iraqi anti-aircraft artillery
opened fire at the hostile planes
and "forced them to flee to their bases in
Turkey," the spokesman
said.
Neineva, along with provinces
of Dohuk and Erbil, are located
inside the northern no-fly zone set up by
the U.S.-led Western
allies after the 1991 Gulf War with the claimed aim of
protecting
the Kurds from the persecution of the Iraqi
government.
A similar air exclusion zone was also established in
southern
Iraq to allegedly protect the Shiite Muslim there.
Iraq has never recognized the two no-fly zones and has regularly
opened fire
at the Western planes enforcing them.
The latest air raids by
the U.S. and Britain came amid
accusations by U.S. President George W. Bush,
who said in his first
State of the Union address on January 29 that Iraq,
Iran and the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea formed "an axis of evil."
Bush accused the three countries of seeking weapons of mass
destruction and warned that they could be targets of the U.S.-led
war on
terrorism, which has been launched since last October.
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