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BEIJING, Nov. 1, (Xinhuanet) -- Facing an increasing tide of attacks, American soldiers Friday cordoned off the village where Saddam Hussein was born, suspecting this dusty farming community of being a secret base for funding and planning assaults against coalition forces.
 A soldier of U.S.
Army's 4th Infantry Division (L) and a member of the Iraqi Civil Defense
Corps (ICDC) hold their weapons at a check point at the entrance of al
Awja, a village outside Tikrit, October 31, 2003.
[Reuters] | "There are ties
leading to this village, to the funding and planning of attacks against U.S.
soldiers," said Lt. Col. Steve Russell, a battalion commander with the 4th
Infantry Division, which is based in nearby Tikrit.
The operation began before dawn with hundreds of U.S.
troops and Iraqi police. They erected a fence of barbed wire, stretched over
wooden poles, and laid spirals of razor wire around the village, a cluster of
mud-and-brick homes set in orchards of pears and pomegranates about six miles
south of Tikrit.
Checkpoints were set up at all roads leading into the
village of about 3,500 residents, many of them Saddam's clansmen and distant
relatives.
Also Friday, U.S. troops outside Baghdad battled Iraqi
rioters when a dispute over a marketplace exploded into anti-American fury.
Leaflets and rumored warnings called for a "day of resistance" Saturday at the
start of a three-day general strike to protest U.S. occupation.
Two Iraqis were killed, and 17 others and two U.S.
soldiers were reported wounded at the marketplace clashes outside Baghdad, as
Iraqi rioters waved portraits of Saddam and shouted "Allahu Akbar!" ¡ª "God is
great!"
A bomb exploded Friday morning near an 82nd Airborne
Division patrol outside Khaldiyah, west of Baghdad, killing one soldier and
wounding four others, the U.S. military reported.
In Fallujah, also west of Baghdad and a center of the
anti-U.S. resistance, an explosion and fire struck the office of the mayor, who
has cooperated with the U.S. occupation. In a melee that followed, one Iraqi was
killed. Later Friday, U.S. troops came under attack at the same spot.
Three or four American soldiers were wounded in the
northern city of Mosul late Friday when assailants threw a grenade at them from
a speeding car, Iraqi police said. The U.S. military confirmed an attack at the
same time but declined to give details.
Rumors spread through Baghdad that bombings or other
resistance action would strike the capital Saturday.
As a result, U.S. officials urged Americans in the Iraqi
capital to "maintain a high level of vigilance."
Meanwhile, it appeared the operation to cordon off the
village where Saddam was born was not aimed at catching him but at identifying
those who live here and making sure that outsiders are quickly spotted. All
adults were required to register for identity cards that U.S. officials said
would allow them "controlled access" in and out of the village.
"This is an effort to protect the majority of the
population, the people who want to get on with their lives," Russell said. "What
we have seen repeatedly month after month is not necessarily attacks against
coalition forces in this village, but there are ties to the planning and
organizing these attacks. That is not fair to the rest of this village."
The intensive hunt for the deposed leader is spearheaded
by the top secret Special Operations Task Force 20, and American officials in
Iraq have said little about any progress. The United States has offered a $25
million reward for Saddam's capture.
On Oct. 13, Maj. Troy Smith, executive officer of the 1st
Brigade of the 4th ID, told reporters that Saddam was "at the least" maintaining
"a strong influence" in the Tikrit area and may have traveled through the region
recently.
The next day, however, the 4th ID spokeswoman, Maj.
Josslyn Aberle, said the military had no direct evidence that Saddam had been in
Tikrit since Baghdad fell to American forces April 9. Saddam was last seen in
public that same day in a Sunni Muslim neighborhood of Baghdad.
Much of the hunt for Saddam appears to be focused in the
area around Tikrit, where Saddam and other key followers could find shelter
among family and clansmen.
Saddam's sons Odai and Qusai were killed July 22 in a
gunbattle with American forces in Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city about 120
miles north of Tikrit.
Secretary of State Colin Powell said he could find no
basis for reports that Saddam may be coordinating attacks on Americans in Iraq.
While Saddam may have survived, "we really don't have the
evidence to put together a claim that he is pulling all the strings among those
remnants in Baghdad and other parts of the country that are causing us
difficulty," Powell said on ABC's Nightline.
White House spokesman Scott McClellan said it's unclear
"what exactly his (Saddam's) role would be, if any. Saddam Hussein is in a
survival mode. He is no longer in power, he's been removed from power. ... It's
just a matter of time before he is brought to justice as well as other remnants
of the regime."
Russell, during Friday's operation, noted that the village
of Uja was unusual because so many key figures in the former government had
roots in this area.
Among them is Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, a longtime Saddam
confidant whom U.S. officials suspect as a force behind some of the recent
attacks. U.S. officials believe al-Douri has linked up with members of the
Islamic extremist group Ansar al-Islam to stage attacks against coalition
forces.
Despite strong support for Saddam in this area, there was
no visible resistance to the American operation, and people lined up quietly
outside a police station to register for ID cards.
"I chose right in coming here. We need the safety," said
Ahmed al-Naseri, who told reporters he was a cousin of Saddam. "We need
freedom."
Another self-described Saddam relative, Ali Sherif
al-Naseri, said people had no choice but to comply with the American orders.
"It may not be totally fair, but it's a good idea," he
said.
As the operation was under way, groups of soldiers manned
foxholes at strategic points around the village. Bradley armored vehicles also
stood guard.
"There are a lot of peaceful people here, but there are
some who are stirring up trouble in Uja," said Capt. Mark Staffler of
Harrisburg, Pa. "We want to help them make a better Iraq."
Russell emphasized that the registration system would
benefit villagers who want to move forward now that their most famous son is out
of power.
"We have provided security," he said. "We have provided a
cordon. We are not limiting the movement of those that live in the town. Once
they have a pass they have complete freedom of movement as they would at any
other time."
Uja Police Chief Ahmed Hamza al-Naseri said the military
operation took him by surprise.
"I didn't know what was going on until I received a call
in the middle of the night," he said. "This is all new to the people of Uja.
They may be afraid at first, but they will accept it."
The police chief said he expected no trouble, and as an
example to others, he was first to get an ID card.
"We do know that the residents are ready to cooperate with
us," Russell said. "We will have enough security in place to enable us to
protect our forces." Enditem
(China Daily/Agencies)
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