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Iraq Detainees Freed; 3 GIs Killed

U.S. and Iraqi authorities freed 500 detainees from the notorious Abu Ghraib prison on Monday in a goodwill gesture to Sunnis ahead of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Earlier, insurgents killed at least 10 people with a suicide bomb targeting police and government workers. At least six of the dead were policemen.

After a brief ceremony outside the prison on the outskirts of Baghdad, the 500 freed detainees left the area on public buses. They were the first of 1,000 to be freed before Ramadan begins next week, the U.S. military said.

Abu Ghraib gained international notoriety after U.S. military personnel running the prison were charged with humiliating and assaulting detainees there.

Arab governments often pardon nonviolent offenders during Ramadan. But the move this week also appeared to be part of a government effort to persuade citizens to vote in the Oct. 15 national referendum on Iraq's draft constitution, particularly the Sunni minority.

In related developments:

  • Three U.S. soldiers were killed in Iraq Monday in two separate attacks involving roadside bombs, the military said Monday. One of the attacks occurred early in the day in western Baghdad, killing two American soldiers, the military said in a statement. The third U.S. soldier, working with the 42nd Brigade, was killed about 50 miles southeast of Baghdad, the military said.
  • On Sunday, at least 33 Iraqis were killed during a day of stepped-up violence. Gunmen loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr ambushed an Iraqi patrol in an eastern Baghdad slum, and U.S. forces joined a 90-minute gunbattle, killing as many as eight of the attackers in the first significant violence in the neighborhood in nearly a year.
  • Elsewhere in Baghdad on Sunday, armed men pulled off a daring armored car robbery, killing two guards and escaping with $850,000, and a suicide car bomber slammed into a convoy carrying Interior Ministry commandos, killing seven of them and two civilians.
  • South of the capital, two separate bicycle bombings in town markets killed at least seven people and wounded dozens Sunday.
  • In Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, three mortar shells landed in a residential district. One shell hit a house, killing seven members of one family, including children, according to police Capt. Laith Muhammed.

    Approval of the constitution would be an important step in the country's democratic transformation. But many Sunni leaders and insurgents are calling for a boycott or a "no" vote in the referendum. They say the document would leave minority Sunnis with far less power than the country's Kurds and majority Shiites.

    If two-thirds of voters in any three of Iraq's 18 provinces reject the charter, a new government must be formed and the process of writing a constitution starts over.

    The suicide car bomber Monday attacked a police checkpoint guarding Iraq's oil ministry, irrigation ministry and national police academy and a private bus carrying 24 oil ministry employees, said police Capt. Nabil Abdel Qadir

    The blast, which came before the prisoner release, killed at least seven policemen and three people on the bus, Qadir said. It wounded 36 Iraqis, 14 of them policemen and 22 of them bus passengers, he said.

    Oil minister Ibrahim Bahr al-Uloum rushed to the site.

    "The insurgents are targeting Iraqi government employees and worshippers in mosques," he said. "These savage acts won't undermine the forthcoming people's referendum on the new Iraqi constitution."

    The attack raised this week's death toll from violence in and around the capital to 43 Iraqis.

    Al-Sadr's militia, the al-Mahdi Army, was a stubborn problem for American forces until a truce was negotiated about a year ago that allowed some U.S. troops to pull out of Sadr City to join the November assault on the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, west of the capital.

    Before the truce, al-Sadr's forces had led unsuccessful but bloody uprisings against coalition forces in Kut and the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala, south of Baghdad.

    With the referendum on Iraq's new constitution less than three weeks away, violence in the poor Shiite district could deepen opposition among al-Sadr's supporters who are bucking mainstream Shiite support for the constitution.

    Shiite unity has been seen as critical for passage of the basic law.

    A statement from al-Sadr's office accused U.S. forces of trying to draw them into a battle "aimed at destroying Iraqi towns, particularly those in pro-Sadr areas and ... to prevent al-Sadr followers from voting" in the referendum.

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