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Marines Recover Bodies Of Slain Comrades
ISSUE 62
FRONT PAGE
Feature
Somalia and Survival in the Shadow of the Global Economy - Part 5
Headlines
Hargeysa Mayor Orders Payment of Subsidies for Maandeeq

Funding Somaliland's Poll

Continuity Or Change In Somaliland?

Health
Drug - The Double Edged Knife (Part 2)
Culture
Sahra Siyad: The First Lady of Song
Editorial & Opinion
War May Render Iraq Ungovernable

Flawed Election Might Derail Recognition

Kulmiye is winning; A true President is waiting in the wings

Why We Shouldn’t Elect Rayale Kahin As President

Consider Other Things $75 Billion Can Do

Peace Talks
Women Peace Delegates Lobby For Their Rights

Rocky Road to Peace

International News
Marines Recover Bodies Of Slain Comrades

Ex-Wife Of Former POW In Somalia Recalls What It Was Like

Saudi Arabia Donates Dates To WFP For Somali And Sudanese

Columbia Teacher Comments Irk Some

Amnesty International Condemns 'Safe Haven' Scheme

UK Defends New Asylum Proposals

Out Of Africa, On To A Fresh Start


NEAR NASIRIYA, Iraq (CNN) - U.S. Marines Friday recovered the bodies of seven fallen comrades who died in intense fighting around Nasiriya in southern Iraqi Sunday, officials said.

The city has been the scene of the fiercest fighting the Marine Corps has been involved in since Vietnam, senior Marines told CNN, and still is not under coalition control five days after coalition forces first engaged Iraqi paramilitaries. 

Three Marine infantry battalions occupy the northern and southern parts of the city, military officials told CNN Friday. 

Col. Ron Johnson, Task Force Tarawa operations officer, said the Marines were "very close to controlling Nasiriya and making it secure." 

Most of the bodies recovered Friday were found in their burned-out armored vehicle. 

When the Marines arrived on the scene, they recovered five bodies, said U.S. Marine Capt. Scott Dyer, who oversaw the recovery effort. Some Iraqi civilians came out and showed where they had buried two others, he said. 

The Iraqis also handed over the personal effects of at least one of the Marines, including photographs and some mail, Dyer said. 

Marine chaplain Gordon Ritchie led the group in a brief religious service at the scene, including a prayer and a moment of silence. 

"Marines care for their own," Ritchie said. "And that is in life and in death. And so they see their duty not complete until they are resting in their homeland with their families." 

Medics performed a field examination to identify some of the victims. DNA test will be performed for final positive identification. 

The bodies will be flown to a staging area where they will be prepared for return to the United States. 

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