Foreigners imposing Taliban like rules on Faluja
Washington Times:
The new government must destroy the insurgents in Faluja. They cannot permit it to remain a sanctuary and base of operations for the people making war on them.
Washington Times:
Residents of Fallujah say foreign insurgents have banned drinking and music, imposed their own courts to enforce strict Islamic law and killed more than a dozen people suspected of collaborating with U.S. forces.
U.S. military officials, who turned the city over to an Iraqi-led "Fallujah Brigade" last month, say they have only anecdotal information about conditions in the city but remain concerned about the influence of fighters loyal to terror chief Abu Musab Zarqawi.
Regular travelers between Baghdad and Fallujah say various groups of mujahideen, or holy warriors, have turned the city 30 miles west of Baghdad into a haven for Islamist radicals.
Foreign fighters from Yemen, Syria and even Pakistan have set up checkpoints in many parts of the city, said Adnan Abdi, a Baghdad businessman who frequently visits Fallujah.
The new government must destroy the insurgents in Faluja. They cannot permit it to remain a sanctuary and base of operations for the people making war on them.
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