Associated Press
Baghdad – The body of a Christian archbishop kidnapped last month was found in northern Iraq Thursday while in Baghdad, a car bomb exploded and killed 18 people.
Gunmen abducted Chaldean Catholic Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho and killed three of his companions soon after they left Mass in the city of Mosul on Feb. 29. It was the latest in a series of attacks against Iraq’s small Christian community.
Monsignor Shlemon Warduni, the auxiliary bishop of Baghdad, said the church in Mosul had received a phone call from the kidnappers on Wednesday telling them the archbishop was dead. They also told church officials where they could find the body.
The Chaldean church is an Eastern-rite denomination that recognizes the authority of the pope and is aligned with Rome. The Vatican said Pope Benedict XVI was “deeply saddened” by Rahho’s death.
“We had all kept hoping and praying for his release,” said Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi. “Unfortunately the most absurd and senseless violence keeps dogging the Iraqi people, and especially the small Christian community.”
In Baghdad, the car bombing took place off a bridge in Tahrir Square, a district of clothing shops just outside the heavily fortified Green Zone, which houses the U.S. Embassy and much of the Iraqi government, a police official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.
The policeman and a hospital official said 18 people died. The hospital official said 57 others were injured.
There has been a resurgence of violence in Iraq’s capital after several months of relative calm that followed an increase of U.S. forces last year.
There also has been a jump in U.S. military deaths in recent days. Twelve Americans have been killed in the past four days, bringing the overall U.S. military death toll since the start of the war to 3,987, according to an AP count.
The U.S. military said Thursday that soldiers had killed a young Iraqi girl after firing a warning shot at a woman who “appeared to be signaling to someone” along a road where several bombs had recently been found.
The shooting occurred Wednesday afternoon in the volatile Diyala province north of Baghdad. An exact location was not given in a military statement.
The girl appeared to be “around 10 years old,” said Maj. Brad Leighton, a military spokesman.
In its statement, the military said that “coalition forces fired a warning shot into a berm near a suspicious woman who appeared to be signaling to someone while the soldiers were in the area. A young girl was found behind the berm suffering from a gunshot wound.”
Leighton said preliminary reports indicated that soldiers did not believe the woman was a potential suicide bomber, but rather “they were afraid she was signaling to someone that the convoy was going by.”
In other violence, five members of an Awakening Council were killed when gunmen attacked two separate checkpoints near Tikrit on Thursday, 80 miles north of Baghdad. Nine others were wounded.
Awakening Councils are made up of mostly Sunni fighters who have accepted U.S. backing to switch allegiances and fight al-Qaida in Iraq.
A suicide bomber also attacked an Awakening Council gathering in the village of Zab outside Kirkuk, 180 miles north of Baghdad. Three people were killed and seven others wounded in that attack.
Gunmen also killed a correspondent for a Baghdad newspaper. Qassim Abdul-Hussein al-Iqabi, 36, was shot while walking in Baghdad’s largely Shiite Karradah neighborhood, police said.
Excluding al-Iqabi, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists has recorded at least 127 journalists and 50 media support workers killed since the U.S.-led war began in March 2003.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



posted March 13, 2008 at 4:13 pm
To hear the mainstream news media, the surge is working. Can they be this mistaken? The effects of our invasion and of the ineptness with which this Republican administration carried it out are tragic and we will be paying for it for decades as will the Iraqis.
The best thing we can do is get out, give them some support from a distance, and let them get about making whatever kind of country they can out of the pieces.
posted March 13, 2008 at 4:47 pm
It’s infuriating that so many American Christians passionately support a war that’s strongly opposed by most of the Christians in the Middle East, a war that’s making the lives of Iraqi and other Middle Eastern Christians profoundly less safe than it was before. Can there be any greater sign that American Protestantism has sold itself out to Caesar? The moment that Christians start letting their worries about the safeties of their contries borders take precedence over the safety of their persecuted brothers and sisters around the world is the moment that they forsake Jesus and the Church, in my opinion.
posted March 13, 2008 at 7:51 pm
Hearing about all the recent deaths in Iraq and then to listen to the knucklehead in Washington saying how right it was to go into Iraq ..blah, blah, blah…How in H*** could that be right???
Am sorry the Archbishop was killed, but he is just one of the thousands if people…our soldiers and the population, children and adults, dead there because of our wrong invasion of Iraq.
It really makes no difference if they were Christian, Muslim, or woshipers of chocolate…they are dead for no reason.
We need to get the H*** out of there ASAP.
posted March 13, 2008 at 8:24 pm
I can’t get by the 10yr. old girl being shot as her mother was beckoning to someone, they shot at the mother as a warning so how was the 10 yr. old shot, and why? Wish we could fast-forward to after Obama or Clinton becomes President and start cleaning up the killing, and get out of Iraq.
posted March 13, 2008 at 10:48 pm
If we are to believe the story above, it sounds like the child was down behind the berm into which the warning shot was fired. Very bad luck, it would seem.
posted March 13, 2008 at 11:03 pm
Bush filsis, without doubt, the worst President the United States has ever had;
and the worst Head of Government in the world today (with the possible exception of Robert Mugabe);
and one of the maybe 5 worst Heads of Government of the last hundred years (with the possible exception of … well, no, come to think of it).
He will have a LOT to answer for one of these days, in this world as well as the next.
posted March 13, 2008 at 11:26 pm
Henrietta: If I’m understanding right, the soldiers fired the warning shot at the woman, and it happened to hit a little girl the soldiers were not able to see. It does not mention if the girl and woman were related, but in any event it seems to have been a tragic accident.
God bless.
posted March 14, 2008 at 12:00 am
sad
posted March 14, 2008 at 8:55 am
Sometimes we assume that Middle Eastern Christians were evangelized at some time during or after the Middle Ages. There have been Christians in that region since Christ. The first Christians in Iraq probably heard about Jesus from one of the twelve or Jesus himself. The people who attacked the Bishop did not attack a stranger. They were attacking the leader of people who have been living side by side with them for roughly 2,000 years. In some sense, his death is just one more in a sea of deaths. In another sense, it is an attack on religious freedom like what we have seen in Tibet. The little girl’s death was almost random. His was not.
posted March 14, 2008 at 12:30 pm
The late Archbishop’s picture was in todays news, he looked so happy in it. Tragic.