* Get your questions answered by tens of thousands of community members
* Network with expats and english speakers living in Shanghai
* Find like-minded people in a sometimes intimidating environment
* GET ONE MONTH FREE GUANXI SMS LOOKUP SERVICE
           close
Remember?
  Forum FAQForum FAQ   SearchSearch   PreferencesPreferences  Watched TopicsWatched Topics  Watched ForumsWatched Forums
Log in to check your private messages Log in to check your private messages    Log inLog in   Ignored Users

Post new topic   Reply to topic
View previous topic Printable version Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Author Message
hc
Post Roaster
Post Roaster


Joined: Apr 04, 2007
Posts: 4545

Post  Posted: Oct 17, 2007 - 02:13 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top
Post subject: Iraqi adviser: Blackwater shooting unprovoked, must go

Ha. Ha.

Let's see how much the "sovereignty" of the puppet government is respected.

My bet is Blackwater stays.



Iraqi adviser: Blackwater shooting unprovoked, guards must go

* Story Highlights
* Adviser: Al-Maliki has asked State Department to "pull Blackwater out of Iraq"
* State Department says it has received no formal request about Blackwater
* 17 Iraqis killed, 27 wounded in September 16 incident, Iraqi officials say
* Blackwater CEO Erik Prince says guards did not commit "deliberate violence"

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki asked the U.S. State Department to "pull Blackwater out of Iraq," after an Iraqi probe concluded that the private contractors committed unprovoked and random killings in a September 16 shooting, an adviser to al-Maliki told CNN.

But in Washington, State Department spokesman Tom Casey said the department has received "no specific request" from Iraq to withdraw the company's contractors.

Al-Maliki adviser Sami al-Askari told CNN the Iraqis have completed their investigation into the shooting at Nusoor Square in Baghdad.

Al-Askari said the United States is still waiting for the findings of the American investigation, but al-Maliki and most Iraqi officials are "completely satisfied" with the findings of their probe and are "insisting" that Blackwater leave the country.

U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Mirembe Natango told CNN by telephone that the Iraqi-U.S. joint commission met and is proceeding with its work on the matter.

"We need to let the joint commission do its work," she said, adding that once the joint commission has finished, it will make policy recommendations.

Blackwater CEO and founder Erik Prince has said the team was attacked and was defending itself at an intersection not far from the heavily guarded Green Zone on September 16. Seventeen Iraqis were killed, including women and children, and 27 were wounded, according to Iraqi officials.

Prince told CNN Sunday that the guards did not commit "deliberate violence."

"There was definitely incoming small arms fire from insurgents" he said on CNN's Wolf Blitzer on "Late Edition." VideoWatch more on the Blackwater investigation »

The U.S. State Department and the FBI are investigating the incident.

Survivors told harrowing stories of being shot at by the guards despite presenting no threat. The FBI has been in the process of speaking to the survivors.

The first U.S. soldiers to arrive on the scene after the incident told military investigators they found no evidence contractors were fired upon, a source familiar with a preliminary U.S. military report told CNN.

The soldiers found evidence suggesting the guards fired on cars attempting to leave and found weapon casings on the scene matching only those used by U.S. military and contractors, the military source said.

But Prince on Sunday told CNN, "In the incident reports I've seen, at least three of our armored vehicles were hit by small arms fire, incoming, and one of them damaged, which actually delayed their departure from the traffic circle while they tried to rig a tow."

A Philadelphia law firm has filed suit in federal court against Blackwater on behalf of the families of three Iraqis killed and one wounded in the in the incident, which occurred in and around Baghdad's Nusoor Square.

The suit claims Blackwater "created and fostered a culture of lawlessness amongst its employees, encouraging them to act in the company's financial interests at the expense of innocent human life."

_________________
Click here to read the latest retarded PM Natalie sent me. Let's make her lose face and FINALLY leave this site.
View user's profile ICQ Number
DesertSpider
Post Roaster
Post Roaster


Joined: Jan 19, 2007
Posts: 4417
Location: SHANGHAI, CHINA
Post  Posted: Oct 17, 2007 - 08:10 PM  Reply with quote  Back to top

Not only stays, but gets stronger over time... all they need to do is change names, presto - new co. / new group. Wink

_________________
wrote:
I'm looking good, got a luscious v of hair going through my chest pubes down to my ball fro.
View user's profile
Display posts from previous:     
Jump to:  
All times are GMT + 8 Hours
Post new topic   Reply to topic
View previous topic Printable version Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Powered by MDForum 2.0.7© 2003-2007 MAXdev Team
Credits
Welcome Guest

Username
Password
Remember me
Register Here!
Join the Shanghai Expat News in the Mail
Email:

Latest Newsletters
Events in Shanghai
November 18, 2008


Members
November 25, 2008


Discounts
November 27, 2008


Web ShanghaiExpat

Welcome Guest
Join Us!

Register, it's free!
 Create an account
Members: Online
Members: Members:79
Guests: Guests:597
Total: Total:676

    Home    Sitemap    Terms of Service    Privacy Policy     Contact Us    Advertising 

All logos and trademarks on this site are property of their respective owner. The comments and forum posts are property of their posters, all the rest copyright 1999-2008 by Max Intermedia LTD.

Powered by MD-Pro