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BAGHDAD, May 26 (Xinhuanet) -- Iraqi Interior
Minister Baqer Jabur Solagh confirmed Thursday that the most wanted terrorist in
Iraq Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had been wounded.
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| Al-Qaida's wing in Iraq said Tuesday that
its leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had been wounded and urged Muslims to pray
for him. | "We have received information that
al-Zarqawi was wounded but we don't know how seriously," Jabur told a news
conference jointly held with Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi.
Al Qaida Organization for Holy War in Iraq said
Tuesday in an Internet statement that its leader Zarqawi had been wounded in
fighting and urged Muslims to pray for his recovery.
Earlier Thursday, the militant group said it had
appointed adeputy to lead the group's fighting until Zarqawi ecovered.
Washington has placed a 25-million-dollar bounty on
Zarqawi, who has claimed to mastermind a series of deadly suicide attacks,
kidnappings and hostage beheadings.
Meanwhile, the interior and defense ministers
unveiled a new security operation to start next week involving more than 40,000
Iraqi troops in Baghdad.
"We will divide Baghdad into seven main areas in
Rasafa (eastern Baghdad), and 15 main areas in Karkh (western Baghdad), and the
forces that will take part in the operation will be more than 40,000 security
members," Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi told the joint press conference.
The security operation, aimed at cracking down on
rising insurgency, will be the largest in Baghdad since the US-led invasion in
2003 to be carried out by the Iraqi security forces from the interior and
defense ministries, Dulaimi added.
"There will be a tough security belt around Baghdad
like a bracelet around an arm," he said, adding "you will see unfamiliar
security measures."
The interior minister said the operation, named
Lightening, will be directed by his ministry to "render the government position
from defensive into offensive."
Iraq has been gripped by a new wave of violence since
a Shiite-dominated government was formed on April 28, during which some 600
people have been killed across the country.
Meanwhile, sectarian strife has also witnessed a
marked increase, with killings of both Shiite and Sunni Arabs reported.
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