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US Air Raid on Fallujah Kills Dozens, Including Children

The attack on the 300,000-populated area killed three children

BAGHDAD, September 2 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Twenty Iraqis, including three children were killed and six others injured Wednesday, September 1, in a US air strike on two buildings in the restive Iraqi city of Fallujah.

Two buildings were destroyed when a US fighter fired a pair of missiles in the residential neighborhood of Jebel in Fallujah.

"We now have 17 dead people and six wounded," Doctor Seifeddin Taha of the Fallujah general hospital told Agence France Presse (AFP).

Other three bodies were recovered from under the rubbles of the destroyed buildings.

The deaths also include one woman and one elderly man after the raid on the city, populated by 300,000.

Dismissed

The US occupation forces confirmed the attack, claiming it was on safe houses and meeting locations of followers of the Jordanian-born Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, who the US blames for several attacks against US forces in the war-torn country.

The US military added the attack was carried out upon intelligence information from US and Iraqi sources.

But Taha's statements carried a dismissal of the allegation.

"All the wounded are families. Among the dead, there could be two or three children but the bodies are torn to pieces and it's difficult to tell," Taha added.

The air raid comes as a star reminder of earlier attacks by US warplanes, that ravaged Fallujah and left a high number of civilian casualties.

In April, at least 700 Iraqis, mostly women and children, were killed and 1500 others injured when the US occupation forces imposed a tight siege on the city and intensified air strikes on its densely-populated areas.

In May, US helicopters killed more than 40 people, including several children, during a wedding party in western Iraq.

Although the occupation forces claimed the attack was on a safe house used by foreign fighters entering Iraq from Syria , the Associated Press aired a video tape showing a decorated wedding vehicle and guests arriving for the celebrations followed by scenes of death and destruction.

Hostages Freed

Meanwhile, seven truckers, who were held hostage for more than a month in Iraq, were released Wednesday reportedly after the Kuwaiti firm they work for has paid a $500,000 ransom for the kidnappers.

The seven truckers, three Indians, three Kenyans and an Egyptian arrived in Kuwait from where they were due to return to their homelands.

The release of the seven truckers were received with extreme welcome.

The freed Egyptian hostage, Mohammed Ali Sanad, told the Arabic-language al-Arabiya television they had been told about their release two days ago.

"We felt very happy and we did not sleep out of our joy," he said.

Relatives of the Indian hostages, for their part, expressed joy over the news of the hostages' release.

"We thank the captors for sparing our boys," BBC News Online quoted Harvinder Singh, elder brother of Sukhdev Singh as saying.

And in Kenya, government spokesman Alfred Mutua said the country was "ecstatic" at news of the release.

An Iraqi group calling itself the Black Banners Bridges had kidnapped the seven truckers, threatening to kill them if the Kuwaiti firm they work for did not pull out of Iraq.

French Anguish

France, meanwhile, faces another day of anguish after the deadline set by the kidnappers of the two French journalists taken hostage in Iraq expired without news about their fate.

"The situation remains worrying," Jean-Paul Cluzel, the head of Radio France which employs Chesnot, said.

He urged to go on with efforts to bring the two French reporters back home.

"The mobilization of everybody, in particular of French Muslims, must continue," he told LCI television.

Le Figaro editor-in-chief Jean de Belot said the two journalists were still alive till Wednesday, urging to exert utmost efforts to secure their release.

"French officials were "nearly certain" late Wednesday the two journalists were still alive."

"There is indirect contact" with the hostage-takers, de Belot said following a meeting at Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin's offices with other top editors.

The uncertain fate of the French journalists comes as a delegation of Muslim scholars arrived in Baghdad, in a bid to secure the release of the two French hostages.

"It is very symbolic that a Muslim delegation goes over there to demand, in the name of Islam, of God and the Muslims of France, that what is being done be stopped because it doesn't help the Muslim cause," said Fouad Alaoui, secretary general of the Union of French Islamic Organizations.

Chesnot of Radio France and Malbrunot of Le Figaro newspaper disappeared in Iraq on August 20, the day they were to have left Baghdad for the Shiite holy city of Najaf, then the scene of fierce fighting between US occupation forces and Shiite militia loyal to Shiite leader Moqtada Sadr.

A group calling itself Tawhid and Jihad said on Thursday it had slain three Turkish hostages in Iraq.

No immediate reports were available on the new beheadings.

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