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Iraqi Missile Kills 17 Kurds: Report
Seventeen Kurds were killed and four others injured Wednesday when an Iraqi missile was fired at a Kurdish village in northern Iraq, Egypt's official MENA news agency reported.

The missile slammed into the village of Kafri in northern Iraq, the report quoted Kurdish sources in Irbil as saying.

No further details were given in the MENA report. But the incident came after Iraqi President Saddam Hussein issued a stern warning to Kurdish leaders against allying with the US-led invading forces.

Saddam's warning was issued in a letter sent to Jalal Talabani, leader of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), announced Iraqi Information Minister Mohammad Said Al-Sahaf on Iraqi television.

A copy of the letter was also sent to Massoud Mustapha Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), Sahaf said.

"I advise you not to rush toward anything that you will regret, as you know that this leadership and the state leading the confrontation against the invaders are staying," Saddam said in the letter.

The PUK and KDP have enjoyed de facto autonomy in northern Iraq since the 1991 Gulf war thanks to the protection of US and British warplanes imposing a no-fly zone in their area.

Saddam expressed his anger at the Kurdish leaders for "flirting with America and the Zionists," adding that such flirting "has entered a dangerous phase now" by opening a northern front against Iraqi people and army.

"It is my moral, basic and constitutional duty to warn you of the dangers of this game, if you have surrendered to it," he said.

Kurdish forces are currently pushing toward the strategic oil center of Kirkuk and another major northern city of Mosul by taking over major positions abandoned by Iraqi troops forced to flee by heavy coalition aerial bombardments.

Kurdish troops on Wednesday took an Iraqi position near the town of Kalak, which is some 40 kms from Mosul, on the demarcation line between Kurdish-controlled area and the government-controlled territories.

Thousands of US troops have parachuted in the Kurdish-controlled north since last week to set up a northern front to encircle the Iraqi capital of Baghdad in the coming days.

(Xinhua News Agency April 3, 2003)

Saddam Warns Kurdish Leaders Against Allying with "Invaders"
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US Envoy Says Further Discussion by General Assembly on Iraq "Not Desirable"
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