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2,000 Demonstrate at Iraqi Bombing Site



 Tue Mar 1, 1:51 PM ET

By RAWYA RAGEH, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq -  More than 2,000 people demonstrated Tuesday at the site of
a car bombing south of Baghdad that killed 125 people, chanting "No to
terrorism!"


AP Photo


Reuters
Slideshow: Iraq



Death Toll in Iraqi Bombing Rises to 120
(AP Video)



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Special Coverage


 


 A French journalist abducted nearly two months ago, meanwhile, pleaded for
help in a video that surfaced Tuesday, saying she was in failing health.

 Florence Aubenas, 43, a veteran war correspondent for the leftist daily
Liberation, and her Iraqi translator, Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, were last
seen leaving her Baghdad hotel on Jan. 5. The video was dropped at the
offices of an international news agency in Baghdad, and it was not possible
to verify when it was made.

 Appearing pale and alone in front of a maroon-colored background, Aubenas,
her hair uncombed, grasped her knees with her arms as she spoke. She said
she was in bad health and pleaded with French lawmaker Didier Julia to help
win her release.

 "Please help me, my health is very bad," she said in English. "Please,
it's urgent now. I ask especially Mr. Didier Julia, the French deputy, to
help me. Please Mr. Julia help me, it's urgent, help me."

 Julia, a maverick lawmaker from President Jacques Chirac's governing
party, caused an uproar last year when he helped mediate the release of
kidnapped French journalists Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot. The
two were freed in December after four months in captivity.

 Julia was accused by French authorities of meddling in the government's
attempts to release the two men, almost sabotaging it. He defended his
actions, saying he had hoped his contacts in the Middle East would enable
him to make progress where, he claimed, France's government has failed.

 The French government on Tuesday warned Julia not to undertake any
"personal initiative" on Aubenas' behalf.

 The video was the first firm word on the fate of the journalist who
previously covered Kosovo, Algeria, Rwanda, and Afghanistan (news - web
sites) in her 19 years with Liberation.

 French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier, speaking in London, said the tape
will be examined "very carefully."

 "What is important is that she is alive," Barnier said.

 Liberation asked television and radio networks not to broadcast the appeal
for help.

 The head of support group for Aubenas expressed happiness at the first
sign she might be alive. "We were very afraid," said Marie-Ange Rodeaud on
France-Inter radio. "It's an unfortunate, but excellent bit of news."

 The head of the French press advocacy group Reporters Without Borders said
he believed Aubenas' hostage takers had put her up to appealing to Julia.

 "I can't imagine anything else but that that was imposed on her," group
secretary-general Robert Menard said on LCI.

 Ten more people died from injuries in Monday's car bombing in Hillah,
south of Baghdad, raising the death toll to 125. The attacker detonated the
bomb as a group of police and national guard recruits were lining up to
take physicals at a medical clinic.

 At least 141 others were injured in the blast - the boldest challenge yet
to Iraq (news - web sites)'s efforts to build a security force that can
take over from the Americans.

 More than 2,000 people held the impromptu demonstration on front of the
clinic, chanting "No to terrorism!" and "No to Baathism and Wahhabism!"

 Wahhabism is a reference to adherents of the strict form of Sunni Islam
preached by Osama bin Laden (news - web sites), while the Baath party was
the political organization that ran Iraq under Saddam Hussein (news - web
sites).

 The demonstrators also demanded that interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi
step down.

 Police prevented people from parking cars in front of the clinic or the
hospital, where authorities blocked hospital gates with barbed wire to
stave off hundreds of victims' relatives desperate for information on loved
ones.

 Provincial Gov. Walid al-Janabi said no funeral procession would be held
in Hillah due to "security reasons." He did not elaborate, but police said
they feared new attacks.

 Authorities blocked hospital gates with barbed wire to stave off hundreds
of victims' relatives desperate for information on loved ones.

 Anxious for news of loved ones, they gathered around lists carrying the
names of the dead and injured that were posted on hospital walls, screaming
and wailing. They also went through victims' belongings, including
identification cards, left in boxes nearby.

 Distraught relatives at the hospital morgue placed the dead into coffins
and loaded them onto pickup trucks, taking them to city mosques and homes
where the bodies will be washed before burial, a Muslim tradition in Iraq.

 Many of the corpses, charred or dismembered, were unrecognizable, stuffed
into white plastic bags. Other bodies lay on the ground in the open because
the overwhelmed morgue had no place to store them.

 "We blame Hillah police for this tragedy because they didn't take the
necessary measures to protect innocent people," said Hussein Hassoun, who
lost two nephews who were standing in line for medical checkups, trying to
join the local police force.

 Many of the dead will be taken to the holy Shiite city of Najaf for burial
later Tuesday.

 The second deadliest attack since Saddam fell took place on Aug. 29, 2003,
when a car bomb exploded outside a mosque in Najaf, killing more than 85
people, including Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim.

 In other violence, an Iraqi National Guard major was killed by a roadside
bomb blast in the southern Doura neighborhood, the Interior Ministry said,
while two unidentified corpses - one beheaded - were found floating in the
Tigris River in Wasit, 60 miles south of Baghdad, morgue officials in
nearby Kut said.

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