Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's prime minister, has hailed a week-long military assault against Shia fighters in the southern city of Basra as a "success". The statement on Tuesday came as sporadic violence continued in Baghdad and Basra despite Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shia leader, ordering his fighters to stay off the streets. Six people were reportedly killed in Baghdad's Sadr City by a missile fired by a US helicopter. The US military said the people killed were armed men who had attacked a tank, but Iraqi police and witnesses said that they were unarmed civilians. Civilian casualties The clashes over the past week - which began with the crackdown in Basra but then spread across Shia dominated areas of the country - made March the deadliest month for six months. Figures compiled by the Iraqi interior, health and defence ministries said 923 civilians were killed last month, up 31 per cent from February. "This is very dangerous and it threatens the deal," he said. The fighting in Basra has also affected British plans to reduce troop levels from 4,100 to 2,500 in the spring. "It is absolutely right that military commanders review plans when the conditions on the ground change." They fired upon a mortar position in an area in the north of Basra where Iraqi soldiers had been attacked. Basra was taken by British forces in 2003. They later withdrew to a base at the city's airport last autumn, before handing over security to the Iraq army in December.
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10:14 AM
Iraqi PM claims Basra success
lafrance
Nuri al-Maliki, Iraq's prime minister, has hailed a week-long military assault against Shia fighters in the southern city of Basra as a "success". 
