The number of U.S. military
personnel wounded since the invasion of Iraq now stands at 6,916,
an increase of almost 1,500 since the transfer of power on June 28, and a nearly two-fold increase since
mid-April. The number of military dead is
now 975, an increase of about 300 since sovereignty was restored.
(MSNBC)
Seven truck drivers who were being held hostage by Iraqi
militants are released after nearly six weeks in captivity.
The three
Kenyans, three Indians, and one Egyptian were abducted July 21 and
had been threatened with death unless Gulf Link Transport, a
Kuwaiti trucking company, stopped doing work in
Iraq. All seven drivers are heading back to Kuwait. (Fox News)
Beslan school hostage crisis:
Armed men and women continue to hold over 1,300 adults and children
hostage in Beslan, North Ossetia, Russia.Russian
authorities announce that they have, for the moment, ruled out the
use of force to end the standoff, while Chechenrebel leader Aslan
Maskhadov denies that his forces are responsible. Late
in the day, 26 women and children are released by the
hostage-takers. (BBC: 1, 2)
Conflict in
Iraq: The U.S. military bombs a site in Fallujah, in what the U.S. describes as a "precision" attack
on a militant safe house.Hospital
officials say that at least seventeen civilians, including up to three children, were killed. (BBC)
The
hostage crisis in Beslan, North Ossetia, Russia ends
violently as fighting erupts in the early afternoon between the
hostage-takers and Russian special
forces. Special forces teams storm the school, in
attempt to save the remaining hostages, after two explosions are
heard and the hostage-takers fire on a medical team attempting to
remove dead bodies. Several hundred people die in the ensuing
battle; the hostage-takers shoot some hostages are shot in the back
as the hostages attempt to flee.
Official reports list 335 confirmed dead, including 156
children, and more than 700 wounded; 176 remain missing. Some of
the hostage-takers briefly escape, but eventually all are reported
killed or captured by Russian authorities. (BBC: 1, 2, 3) (Interfax: 1, 2)
Women on
Waves, a group that provides abortions
in international waters for
women in countries where the procedure is outlawed, is denied
access to Portuguese territorial waters. The Portuguese
government has placed warships in the vicinity to enforce the
decision. (Indymedia)
Iraqi
officials now say that contrary to earlier reports, Izzat Ibrahim ad-Douri, the deputy
commander of Iraq's armed
forces during the rule of Saddam
Hussein, has not been captured. Medical tests now show
that the man who had been identified as Izzat Ibrahim is actually
one of his relatives. Seventy of Izzat Ibrahim's supporters are now
dead and 80 have been captured. Izzat Ibrahim ad-Douri is number
six on the U.S.'s list of the 55 most wanted Iraqis. (CNN)(Reuters)
Canada's federal government and its provincial
and territorial leaders reach an accord to increase funding for the
country's national health care
system. In exchange for an increase in federal funding
of CAD 18 billion over the next six years, provincial and
territorial leaders agree to reforms intended to reduce patient waiting times. (Toronto Star)
In a
report released today, the U.S.State Department for the first time places the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on its list of "countries of particular concern"
(CPCs) that engage in "particularly severe violations" of religious freedom. A designation
as a CPC requires the State Department to take whatever steps are
necessary — up to the level of sanctions — to increase religious
tolerance in the designated country. (CNN.com)(State
Department report)
A
Countryside Alliance rally
outside Britain's Parliament buildings, in opposition to a bill that would ban fox-hunting, descends into violence as
protesters and police clash.Some
protesters successfully breach security and enter the floor of the
House of
Commons. The bill later passes 339–155. (BBC:
1, 2)
Five
crew members of an Irish yacht, who had been
adrift in a liferaft for seven
days after abandoning their ship, are rescued by helicopter off the Cornwall coast of Britain. The crew members ran out of water on Monday
and were running low on food when rescued. (BBC)(RTÉ)
Both
the European Union and the government of the United
States express concern about Russian PresidentVladimir Putin's announcement that, as a
means of responding to terrorism, he would
significantly alter Russia's political system.The Russian
government rejects the United States' concerns as inappropriate
interference in Russia's internal
affairs. (Reuters: 1, 2)
As of
13:00 local time (1800 UTC September 15), the
center of Hurricane Ivan is located
about 275 km (170 miles) south of the coast of Alabama and is moving northward at about 23 km/h (14
mph).The hurricane is now projected to make
landfall along the Gulf Coast of the
United
States very early on Thursday.Forecasters now
predict that there is little risk that the hurricane will pass over
New
Orleans. A hurricane warning is in effect for the
Gulf Coast from New Orleans to the Florida Panhandle. (NOAA/NHC)(Washington Post)
As
Hurricane Ivan approaches the
Gulf Coast of the United
States, an estimated 1.9 million people, including 1.2
million residents of metropolitan New Orleans, are advised to evacuate. The situation
is particularly dangerous for New Orleans, since a direct or close
hit by the hurricane could breach the levees
around the city, causing its streets to fill with a mixture of
floodwater, raw sewage, gasoline, and chemicals. (CNN)
Prominent Saudis reject
yesterday's declaration by the U.S.State Department that Saudi Arabia severely restricts religious freedom, arguing that the
report that made the declaration was politically motivated.(Reuters)
Afghan President
Hamid Karzai survives an assassination
attempt when a rocket misses his helicopter, bound for the city of
Gardez, by some
300 yards (275 m).The helicopter returned to Kabul.(ABC News)
UFC Heavyweight Champion Frank Mir seriously injured in
motorcycle accident.
The
government of India announces
that Tamil will be the first language
recognized as a "classical
language" in India. Government ministers add that
Sanskrit and other languages could be
granted the status, depending on their "heritage and legacy". The
Indian government plans to create a center for the study of
languages so designated. (Times of India)(The Hindu)
Three
men are arrested in New
Delhi, India for
attempting to sell an 800 year old TibetanBuddhist manuscript, which had been
reported stolen from a monastery at Kalimpong, West
Bengal several months earlier. The thieves
attempted to sell the manuscript for 30 million rupees (535,000
euros), although experts say that it could be
worth three times that much on the international market. (Hindustan Times)(India News via New Kerala)
Darfur
conflict: Peace talks between the Sudanese government and Darfurian rebels, which began three weeks ago,
collapse.Sudan accuses the United States of prolonging the conflict by describing the
actions of Arab militias in Darfur as genocide.Rebels will meet with Nigerian president Olusegun
Obasanjo Friday evening to give their version of the
story.(MSNBC.com)
U.S.air raids in the city of Fallujah, allegedly aimed at militants loyal to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, kill an estimated
60 fighters, according to claims from the U.S. military. A
spokesman for Iraq's health ministry says at least two women and 17
children were among the wounded. Meanwhile in central Baghdad, a suicide car bomb leaves
at least 13 dead.(The Guardian)
In an
interview with the Saudi-owned
Al-Arabiyya satellite
television network, U.S.Secretary of StateColin Powell plays down the importance of
Wednesday's report by the State
Department — which listed Saudi Arabia as a country that
severely restricts religious
freedom — saying that he hopes that he will be able to use
dialogue to remove Saudi Arabia from the list.
CBS News announces that it now doubts
the authenticity of the "Killian
memos", after defending their authenticity for more than a week
in the face of widespread expert opinion to the contrary.
The
network acknowledges that it was a mistake to use the memos as part
of the supporting evidence in a 60
Minutes story by Dan Rather
alleging deficiencies in U.S.PresidentGeorge W.Bush's Vietnam-era
service in the Texas Air
National Guard. (USA Today)
Syria begins a
"phased redeployment" of its forces in Lebanon (currently estimated at 20,000 troops), moving
about 1,000 troops out of bases south of Beirut; it is not clear whether they will be
redeployed in Lebanon or Syria.Earlier this month,
UN Security Council
Resolution 1559, drafted by the United States and France, called for all foreign troops to leave
Lebanon.(CNN.com)
The
United
States military drops espionage
charges against Syrian-American airmanAhmad al Halabi after he pleads guilty to
four lesser charges. The judge criticizes the prosecution
for improperly handling key evidence and for failing to correct the
mistranslation of a crucial document. (Reuters)
2004 Atlantic hurricane
season: The death toll in Haiti from
flooding caused by this weekend's passage of
Hurricane Jeanne is now at 1,080
persons, and government officials say the final number is likely to
be around 2,000. At least 175,000 Haitians have been
affected by the flooding. (Reuters)
U.S. air strikes on the Iraqi city of
Fallujah destroy several buildings. The U.S. military
says no civilians were reported in the
area, but a hospital official says at least
eight civilians were killed, and television broadcasts show civilian survivors,
including an infant, being pulled out of a destroyed building.
(BBC)
In
the Gaza
Strip, four Palestinians kidnap
Riad Abu Ali, an Israeli citizen working for CNN. Two other CNN employees were beaten and
their equipment stolen. (Reuters)(Haaretz)
The
Israeli army raids the West Bank city of Jenin, taking over a hospital and several other
buildings, making a number of arrests, and reportedly wounding
three Palestinians.Several other
violent incidents occurred in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.(The Australian)(BBC)
The
U.S. military carries out air
strikes on several suspected militant positions in the Baghdad suburb of Sadr City, killing at least five people and wounding 46,
according to a local hospital official. The U.S. military
disputes that total. (AP)(BBC)
Two
separate car bombs kill at least seven
Iraqi national guardsmen in Mosul and Fallujah, while mortars are fired at a police academy in
Baghdad, with no reported casualties. (AP:
1, 2)
Health officials in Thailand report that they have identified a likely case of
human to human transmission of the H5N1 strain
of avian influenza, although the
World Health Organization
says the transmission occurred only after prolonged contact between
individuals. A more easily transmitted virus could
potentially cause a worldwide flu pandemic
on the level of the 1918 Spanish flu.
(Reuters)
U.S. military planes bomb a building in the
insurgent-held city of Fallujah, in what the U.S. describes as a raid against
terrorists linked to Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi. Local doctors say at least three civilians
were killed, but the U.S. says only "Zarqawi operatives" died.
(BBC)
The
price of U.S. light crude briefly
exceeds the price of USD
50/barrel, the highest since
1983.Analysts attribute the increase largely to
concerns over the disruption of oil production in Nigeria; conflicts in Iraq and Saudi Arabia and the effects of Hurricane Ivan are also cited.(BBC)
A
Nigerian militant group threatens "all-out war" against
foreign companies in the Niger Riverdelta region if they do not leave by October.
The European oil company Royal Dutch/Shell has already evacuated
254 non-essential workers from the area. (BBC: 1, 2)
Reports that ransom was paid to secure
yesterday's release of two Italian aid workers raise fears that the burgeoning
hostage crises will worsen. Gustavo Selva, an Italian
lawmaker, states that "The sum ($1 million) is probably correct".
To date about 130 foreigners have been taken hostage. About 30 of
these have been killed. (Reuters)
Five
masked men armed with bats and chains attack Chris Brown and Kim
Lamberty, members of Christian Peacemaker Teams
outside the Israeli settlement of Ma'on in Hebron while the volunteers were escorting Palestinian children to school.
CPT alleges the assaults are part of an ongoing pattern of
intimidation by Israeli Settlers.
(BBC)(Haaretz)(Al Jazeera)
Two
Israeli children, aged 3 and 5, are killed after a
Qassam rocket attack from Palestinian
terrorists on the town of Sderot.Hamas claimed the
attack was launched in retaliation for the Israeli raid of the
Jabaliya refugee camp, which left four
Palestinians dead. (BBC)(Haaretz)
Two
Palestinianteenagers are killed and power supplies are knocked
out after an Israeli raid on the Jabaliya
refugee camp.The raid was launched in retaliation for
the rocket attacks on the town of Sderot which left two children dead.(BBC)
The asteroid4179 Toutatis passes within 1 million miles (1.6 million kilometers,
or about four times the distance from Earth to the Moon) of Earth. Toutatis is the
largest known asteroid to pass this close to Earth. (Space.com)
The Montréal Expos play their last game at the Olympic Stadium
in Montréal against the Florida Marlins in front of over 30,000
fans
At
least three people are killed by U.S.air raids on the insurgent
held city of Fallujah.Locals say civilians are among the dead,
but the U.S. maintains they struck a safe house of the Jordanian militant Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi.Just outside Baghdad, a rocket fired at a US
military support base killed one coalition soldier.(BBC)
At least 41 people are killed in a multiple bomb attack on a US
military convoy traveling through Baghdad, close to a water
treatment plant. At least 34 of them were children. (BBC)
Three southern provinces (Basra, Missan and Dhiqar), which together
control 80 percent of Iraq's proven oil
reserves, are considering plans to set up an autonomous region.(Financial Times)
Israel launches a major offensive into the Jabaliya refugee camp killing at least 23 gunmen and civilians.
Earlier this morning, a column of Israeli tanks
moved into the center of the camp, followed by bulldozers. At least three Palestinian civilians
have been killed thus far. Homes are being demolished, forcing
people to flee. 72 Palestinians are known to have been wounded,
some losing limbs. (BBC)(Reuters)
Two
Palestinians are killed by Israeli troops returning fire after an Israeli soldier was killed at an observation post in the
northern Gaza
strip. The troops have been engaged in that part
of the northern Gaza Strip since yesterday, September 29. (AP)