A US Army soldier guard the entrance to a Baghdad power plant Monday April 21, 2003. Iraqi engineers flipped a switch to start a steam turbine at Baghdad's biggest power plant Monday, a step toward lighting this war-battered city that has spent two weeks in darkness.
Retired US Lt. General Jay Garner speaks to media at the tarmac upon his arrival in Baghdad Monday, April 21, 2003. The 64-year-old general will head the civilian administration that will start the uphill task of rebuilding the nation and prepare the way for an Iraqi government.
A U.S. Army soldier stands guard during a protest in front of Baghdad's Palestine hotel Monday April 21, 2003 in Baghdad. Thousands if Shiites protested against the U.S. military presence in their holy city of Najaf.
A U.S. Marine of Task Force Tarawa clears weeds from tombstones to help restore the Kut War Cemetery, Monday, April 21, 2003, in Kut, 160 kms. (100 miles) south of Baghdad. The Kut War Cemetery is the resting place of British and Indian soldiers who died in battle against the Turks during their push towards Baghdad during the first world war.
A student is seen through a window broken by looters while cleaning up the Saddam High School in Kirkuk, Iraq, Monday, April 21, 2003. Students and officials have been cleaning up schools damaged in recent weeks in preparation to reopen them.
A picture of Saddam Hussein sits in a pile of books and papers as a student cleans up damage left by looters at the Saddam High School in Kirkuk, Iraq, Monday, April 21, 2003.
An old beggar sits under pro-America graffiti on a wall in Kirkuk, Iraq, Monday, April 21, 2003. Life is slowly returning to normal for the people of the northern Iraqi oil city.
Iraqi Shiite Muslim men chant and pound their chests as they follow a funeral procession into the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf, Iraq, Sunday, April 20, 2003. Across the country, Iraqis are bringing their war dead to Najaf, one of the principal holy cities for Shiite Muslims.
Capt. Daniel Bucur, of Georgia, chaplain for Task Force 2-69 Armor, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, prays with soldiers during an Easter service Sunday along the Tigris River in central Baghdad.
Iraqi relatives of Hussein Mohammed Nasser weep at a marked grave during his funeral at the Valley of Peace cemetery in Najaf, Iraq, Sunday April 20, 2003. According to his family, Nasser was shot and killed by American troops in Baghdad the day before.
A technician adjusts a steam valve as a flare in the background burns off excess gas in the process of refining crude oil, at the reopened Daura oil refinery, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, April 20, 2003. The refinery's general manager says Daura is the only refinery operating in Iraq. Al-Kashab says he hopes to get fuel back on the Baghdad market within days, producing revenues to pay the refinery's workers.
Men stand on a hill overlooking the city to watch the sunset in Kirkuk, Iraq, Sunday, April 20, 2003. Life is slowly returning to normal in the northern Iraqi city that fell to coalition forces on April 10.
A U.S. Army soldier mans a machine gun as smoke fills the sky from the Ministry of Agriculture storage house which was set on fire by looters, in Baghdad Sunday, April 20, 2003.
U.S. army Captain Tom Roughneen of New Jersey smiles as he greets newly baptized three-month old Maria Saad during a celebration at the Catholic cathedral in Kirkuk, Iraq, Sunday, April 20, 2003. Christians in Iraq celebrated Easter Sunday.
U.S. Army soldiers help Red Crescent workers dig out bodies Sunday, April 20, 2003, of people killed during fighting on the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq. The smoke is from the Ministry of Agriculture depot that was set on fire by looters.