At dawn
this morning gunmen blew up a school being used as a polling station in the
Al-Karabla in Al-Qa'im township in western Anbar on the border with Syria.
The school was completely demolished but there were no casualties.
In Ramadi,
there are some relatively low-level clashes still going on; the various
hot-zone districts are relatively calm, although some gunfire could be heard
during the night.
In
Fallujah, a large number of families - and some from Ramadi - have migrated
towards Kurdistan, firstly as a result of the
flooding of the city's southern sector, and also as a result of the continuing
indiscriminate shelling that has today caused the death of one resident and
injured 6 others.
A
pedestrian crossing point has been opened after the flooding of vast areas of
Fallujah.
Al-Garma is
completely closed off by the army with nobody able to get into or out of the
town which has been the target of intensive shelling during the past three
days.
Also today,
the Anbar Governorate Council has disbursed some of the funds allocated as
compensation to the city of Ramadi.
The disbursement amounts to 10 million Dinars (about $8400) to each residential
home. The amount is insufficient, but the local government has said that it
represents the first partial payment of the compensation for those whose homes
have been destroyed.
Sheikh Ali
Hatem, who had led the Military Council of Anbar Tribal Revolutionaries, left
the country yesterday (Friday) by way of the Treybeel crossing into Jordan on his way to Amman. This has raised questions: he is
wanted by the government but left the Governorate and the country using his
Iraqi passport through the official border crossing at Treybeel. Some are
saying that negotiations are about to take place in Amman, and that he secured permission by the
central government to leave. Others are saying that he was given a large sum of
money that secured his exit to Amman.
Regarding
the upcoming elections, there are differences of opinion among the Anbar
residents about whether to take part or not. Obviously, there are numerous
hindrances, particularly in Ramadi and Fallujah that can only undertake a
limited partial balloting.
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