
http://news.bbc.co.u...raq/default.stm
Chaos as Mosul falls to Kurds
Friday, 11 April, 2003, 11:09 GMT 12:09 UK
http://news.bbc.co.u...ast/2938191.stm
Widespread looting has broken out in the main northern Iraqi city of Mosul, after the Iraqi army abandoned the city to US-backed Kurdish fighters.
Television pictures showed people picking up banknotes from the street, and beds, furniture and even a roof-top air-conditioning unit being stripped from buildings and carried away.
A central market was set on fire and pictures of the ousted Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, were defaced.
Kurdish fighters set up roadblocks, while columns of Iraqi soldiers were seen flooding out of the city. The US military says the entire 5th Corps of the Iraqi army has surrendered.
US special forces are also said to be in Mosul, but no sightings were reported by journalists.

Kurdish fighters are said to have broken into Mosul's central bank
A central market was set on fire and pictures of the ousted Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, were defaced.
Kurdish fighters set up roadblocks, while columns of Iraqi soldiers were seen flooding out of the city. The US military says the entire 5th Corps of the Iraqi army has surrendered.
US special forces are also said to be in Mosul, but no sightings were reported by journalists.
The developments come a day after Kurdish fighters swept in unopposed to the other main city in the area, oil-rich Kirkuk.
The BBC's Malcolm Brabant says American control over Kirkuk and Mosul will open up more avenues from which to attack Tikrit, whose people are bound to Saddam Hussein by tribal ties and are expected to put up fierce resistance.
He adds that the town can expect continued heavy air attacks for the next four or five days, while American reinforcements make their way to what could be the last battlefield of the war.
Meanwhile, US forces in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, say they are taking measures to try to end the serious security problems in the city caused by the looting of hospitals, government buildings, shopping centres and private homes.
They are setting up an operations centre at the Palestine Hotel in the centre of the city, and are calling on professional people to come forward to help run public services.
Sporadic fighting has continued in Baghdad, with Iraqi militia fighters still resisting US forces in the densely-populated western suburbs of the city.
Kurdish forces in Kirkuk say they will hand over control to the Americans shortly, following their unexpected advance into the city on Thursday against strong US advice.
Washington has moved quickly to reassure Turkey that the Kurds will not be allowed to control Kirkuk and its oil resources, or to declare an independent state in northern Iraq.
Ankara is concerned that this could inspire separatist demands among its own sizeable Kurdish minority. In a move to reassure the Turks, the US has invited Turkish military observers into northern Iraq.
After Kirkuk fell, 20,000 Kurdish fighters streamed into the city, waving guns and firing into the air. The pictures caused consternation in Turkey, and it threatened to send its troops across the border into northern Iraq.
Now the Kurds in the city are keeping a very low profile, housed in former Iraqi barracks just outside the city. Their commander has said they will leave as soon as a sizeable US force arrives to take control of the city. He said the forces would return to the two main Kurdish cities of Sulaymaniyah and Irbil.
HUMAN COST OF WAR
US: 99 dead (including 26 in non-combat accidents, 5 to 'friendly fire', 2 under investigation), 8 missing
UK: 30 dead (including 16 in non-combat accidents, 5 to 'friendly fire')
Iraq: At least 1252 civilian deaths*, military deaths unknown
*Former regime figures, 3 April





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