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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

SLUG: 2-307071 Iraq Attacks (L)
DATE:>
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=9/2/2003

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=IRAQ / ATTACKS (L)

NUMBER=2-307071

BYLINE=SCOTT BOBB

DATELINE=BAGHDAD

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: A car bomb has exploded at a main police station in Baghdad, causing many casualties. Correspondent Scott Bobb reports from the Iraqi capital that the incident follows an attack on a U-S military police convoy in which two American soldiers were killed and one wounded.

TEXT: The car bombing occurred before midday at the Rasafa police station in western Baghdad. It is a major police headquarters for the capital.

V-O-A reporter Selwan al-Naimi, an eyewitness, was thrown across his car by the blast.

/// AL-NAIMI ACT ///

I saw many casualties, people injured, many ambulances, car ambulances, and American helicopters. Hum-vees came, suddenly.

/// END ACT ///

The station is the headquarters of Baghdad's Acting Police Chief, General Hassan al-Obeidi. It is located across the street from the Police academy where part of Iraq's reconstituted police force is being trained.

Meanwhile, U-S military officials announced that two soldiers with a military police brigade died Monday when their convoy struck an explosive device in southern Baghdad. A third soldier was reportedly wounded.

Four days ago, a car bomb exploded outside the main mosque in Najaf, killing more than 80 people and a Shi'ite Muslim leader, Ayatollah Mohamed Baqer al-Hazim. The cleric was buried in Najaf after three-days of mourning attended by hundreds-of-thousands of people.

U-S military officials say they are due Wednesday to transfer responsibility for security in the Najaf area to an international force led by Poland. But they add that patrols by U-S Marines will continue in Najaf city for several weeks.

The Iraqi Governing Council Monday named a Cabinet of ministers, the first since the fall of the Saddam Hussein government. The Cabinet, which is divided along ethnic and sectarian lines like the Council itself, contains 13 Shi'ite Muslim ministers, including the ministers of oil, petroleum, and trade.

Sunni Muslims hold five ministries, including finance and labor, while Kurdish leaders also hold five posts, including foreign affairs. Turkomen and Christians received one ministry each.

/// REST OPT /// The Cabinet does not have ministries of defense or information. These agencies, which included many of the former regime's most feared security services, are being reorganized.

Nor does the Cabinet have a ministry of religious affairs, a concession to the sectarian tensions that plague the country.

The chairman of the Governing Council will act as prime minister. The rotating position passed Monday to the leader of the Iraqi National Congress, Ahmed Chalabi. (SIGNED)

NEB/SB/RAE



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