| 2nd American Reported
Beheaded
Posted 22.09.2004

A headless body was handed over to
American authorities in Baghdad on Wednesday, according
to the U.S. Embassy, which has not yet been able to
identify the body.
The discovery and handover of the
body came one day after an Islamic Web site claimed
that militants had beheaded a second American hostage
in Iraq in two days after a 24-hour deadline ran out
for meeting their demand to release women in U.S.
and British custody in Iraq.
The claim, posted Tuesday night under
the pseudonym Abu Maysara al-Iraqi, could not be verified.
His postings have in the past proved correct, but
a video of the killing by Jordanian militant Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi's Tawhid and Jihad group that was pledged
to be released "soon" had not materialized
by early Wednesday.
American engineer Eugene Armstrong,
52, was the first of three men abducted Thursday to
be killed, apparently Monday, and graphic footage
of his beheading was posted on Islamic Web sites within
an hour of an al-Iraqi statement promising it.
American Jack Hensley, who would have
been 49 Wednesday, and Briton Kenneth Bigley, 62,
were kidnapped with Armstrong. The brief statement
did not identify the latest victim by name, but indicated
it was Hensley.
"The nation's zealous sons slaughtered
the second American hostage ... after the end of the
deadline ... We will provide you with film of the
slaughter soon, God willing," said the statement.
Militants had said they would kill
the three hostages unless all Muslim women held in
U.S.-run prisons in Iraq were released.
In other recent developments:
Jordanian clerics and media report that the spiritual
leader of the most active insurgency group in Iraq,
Tawhid and Jihad, has been killed in a U.S. air strike
in the Baghdad suburb of Abu-Ghraib. Al-Shami was
an aide to Tawhid and Jihad's leader, terrorist Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, whose group has claimed responsibility
for numerous beheadings.
U.S. aircraft and tanks attacked rebel positions in
Baghdad's Sadr City slum, killing 10 people and wounding
92, according to hospital officials.
A suicide attacker detonated a car bomb Wednesday
outside a photocopy shop in western Baghdad where
Iraqi National Guard applicants prepared papers before
heading to a nearby recruiting center, killing at
least six people and wounding 54.
A U.S. Black Hawk helicopter crashed shortly after
take off near the city of Nasiriyah in southern Iraqi
late Tuesday, wounding three crew members. It was
not immediately clear why the aircraft went down.
A car bomb struck a U.S. patrol on the road to Baghdad's
airport Tuesday, wounding four American soldiers and
several Iraqis. The car bomb destroyed an armored
Humvee and around 10 civilian vehicles on the highway.
President Bush delivered an unapologetic defense of
the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, telling the United
Nations Tuesday that his decision "helped to
deliver the Iraqi people from an outlaw dictator."
Mr. Bush also took the opportunity to meet with interim
Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi and denounce the
terrorists who beheaded American hostage Eugene Armstrong.
The claim of Hensley's murder had not yet surfaced
at the time of the Allawi meeting.
Wednesday morning - hours after the
claim of the second beheading - the Iraqi Justice
Ministry said the government and the U.S. forces had
decided to free a female prisoner in American custody.
The authorities say there are only two women in the
coalition forces' custody in Iraq.
Ministry spokesman Noori Abdul-Rahim
Ibrahim said Rihab Rashid Taha, a scientist dubbed
"Dr. Germ" for her work on biological weapons,
would be conditionally released on bail. He denied
the decision is linked to the kidnappers' demands.
In Britain, the family of hostage
Kenneth Bigley welcomed the release. Referring to
the kidnappers, Bigley's brother Paul told British
Broadcasting Corp. radio: "Hopefully they will
pick this up on the media, and show that they have
a gram of decency in them by releasing Ken."
Bigley's son, Craig, 33, had appealed
to British Prime Minister Tony Blair, saying on television
Tuesday: "Please meet the demands and release
my father - two women for two men."
Late Tuesday night, an expanded version
of the al-Iraqi posting saying a second American had
been killed appeared on a separate Web site warning
that the British hostage would be the next to die.
It did not contain any new deadline, and its authenticity
was not known.
Hensley, who is married and has a
13-year-old daughter, Sara, is from Marietta, Georgia.
His wife, Patricia, went on television Tuesday with
several appeals aimed directly at the kidnappers asking
them to spare her husband's life.
The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
determined with a "high degree of confidence"
that al-Zarqawi was the masked militant who read out
the lengthy statement before drawing a knife and beheading
Armstrong.
The U.S. military says the other woman
in its custody in Iraq is Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash,
a biotech researcher known as "Mrs. Anthrax."
Sheik Abdul-Sattar Abdul-Jabbar, a
member of the Association of Muslim Scholars, conservative
Iraqi clerics who oppose the U.S. presence in Iraq
but have interceded in the past to win the release
of foreign hostages, questioned the claim of only
two female prisoners in U.S. and British custody.
Abdul-Jabbar told al-Jazeera pan-Arab
satellite television there are "tens, perhaps
hundreds of Iraqi women prisoners in the occupation's
jail that were supposed to be released before this
tragedy."
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