Iraq Says Over 1,140 Killed in
U.S., British Air Raids
Xinhuanet
2002-05-30
BAGHDAD, May 29 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S. and British
air raids on the
two no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq since their setup
have left 1,142 Iraqis killed and 1,261 others wounded, Iraqi
Foreign Minister Naji Sabri Ahmed said in a letter to United
Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Wednesday.
Ahmed accused the United States and Britain of
violating the U.
N. Charter and the International Law, and practising "state
terrorism" against Iraq, the official Iraqi News Agency (INA)
reported.
Ahmed affirmed Iraq's rights of self defense
against "the
continuous and hostile terrorist acts" by the United States and
Britain, the INA said.
The two no-fly zones were set up by the
U.S.-led Western allies
after the 1991 Gulf War to allegedly protect the Kurds in the north and
Shiite Muslims in the south from the persecution of the Iraqi government.
Iraq has never recognized the two air exclusion
zones for lack
of clear authorization from the U.N. Security Council and has
regularly opened fire at the patrolling Western planes.
U.S. and Britain have intensified attacks on
the two air
exclusion zones recently. Iraq said five civilians were injured
when its northern part was bombed on Tuesday. This was the fourth
time in the past 10 days that U.S. and British jets raided the two no-fly
zones.
Four civilians were injured when U.S. and
British jets bombed
the southern Muthana Province on May 20. Iraq said two were killed and two
others injured when the Western planes bombed Thi-Qar Province on May 23.
U.S. and British air strikes in southern Iraq on May 25 left 18 people
wounded, according to Iraqi sources.