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IRAQ WARS
Over 700 have died to reconstruct Iraq: US report
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 27, 2012


Gunmen kill five Iraqi women from same family
Samarra, Iraq (AFP) July 28, 2012 - Gunmen shot dead a women, her three daughters and her daughter-in-law in the Iraqi city of Samarra on Saturday evening, security and medical officials said.

The women were killed at a house in Al-Shuhada area of Samarra, north of Baghdad, after iftar, the meal in which Muslims end their daily fast during the holy month of Ramadan, a police lieutenant colonel said.

The source said the gunmen were targeting the older woman's husband, Hamid Majid, who is the director of a school in Samarra, but that he was not there at the time.

A medical source at Samarra hospital said it had received the bodies of five women who had been shot dead.

The latest violence comes after Iraq suffered a spike in unrest in June, when at least 282 people were killed, according to an AFP tally based on figures supplied by officials and medics.

Violence in Iraq has declined sharply from its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common.

At least 719 people participating in reconstruction projects financed by the United States in Iraq were killed during the conflict between 2003 and 2010, a US study revealed Friday.

The report by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction said the toll included 318 Americans, 111 third country nations, 271 Iraqis and 19 whose nationalities were not known.

SIGIR conducted the study from May 1, 2003 to August 31, 2010, when the US declared the end of combat operations and Operation Iraqi Freedom.

During that time, the United States spent $60 billion on reconstruction projects and to stabilize the country, according to the report.

No central database exists to track the number of deaths, which SIGIR says may exceed the number given in the report.

Iraqi deaths comprised 38 percent of the toll, roughly matching US military casualties, which comprised 37 percent of the death toll, according to SIGIR.

Most of those killed (71 percent) were involved in projects to develop Iraq's infrastructure and to shore up its civil society, the report found.

About 20 percent of those killed were involved in training Iraqi police, and eight percent in Iraqi army training programs.

Some 4,409 US soldiers were killed in the conflict.

The US military completed its withdrawal from Iraq in December 2011, nine years after the conflict began.

Still, the US embassy in Baghdad is among the largest in the world, with 12,000 employees, largely from private enterprises, in April. The embassy is behind an ongoing program to train Iraqi police.

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