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Iraq civilian deaths hit new high in January
01 Feb 2007 09:05:11 GMT
Source: Reuters

BAGHDAD, Feb 1 (Reuters) - Iraqi civilian deaths in political violence reached a new high in January, data from an interior ministry official showed on Thursday.

The statistics, widely viewed as an indicative but only partial record of violent deaths, showed 1,971 people died from "terrorism" in January, slightly up from the previous high of 1,930 deaths recorded in December 2006.

The figures from the Interior Ministry source are collated from various ministries and while not comprehensive, are a guide to trends that are consistent with data from other sources.

The United Nations, which gathers data from the Health Ministry and Baghdad's morgue, put the number of civilian deaths in December at 2,914, down from 3,462 in November.

All such statistics are controversial in Iraq. The latest tally given by the United Nations was branded exaggerated by the Iraqi government. The U.S. military gives no such figures.

The Iraqi government, visibly frustrated at its inability to rein in the increasing violence, has stopped publishing figures.

The Interior Ministry toll refers to people killed in "terrorism" -- a category that may not include many of the dozens of unidentified bodies found daily in Baghdad, many the victims of sectarian death squads.

January's figures also put the number of insurgents killed at 590, the highest toll for at least a year. That included a fierce battle between security forces and a shadowy sect near the holy city of Najaf on Sunday in which the government has said around 260 gunmen were killed.
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Smoke rises from destroyed houses which are said to belong to Shi'ite cult members at the scene of last week's fighting near the holy city of Najaf, 160 km (100 miles) south of Baghdad, February 3, 2007. The U.S. military said it was still investigating who its troops and Iraq's security forces fought last weekend in clashes in which hundreds of people were killed.