Basra, Iraq – British armored vehicles broke down the walls of the central jail in the southern city of Basra on Monday and freed two British soldiers, reportedly undercover commandos arrested for shooting two Iraqi policemen, witnesses said. But London said the two men were released as a result of negotiations.
The different versions of events came on a chaotic day that raised questions about how much sovereignty Iraqi authorities really were granted when the U.S.-led Coalition Provision Authority handed over power to an interim Iraqi government in the summer of 2004.
The arrests of the two British soldiers Monday appeared to have been the first real and public test of how far that sovereignty extends. There have been no known incidents of Iraqi authorities arresting U.S. soldiers operating in the Iraqi heartland.
Mohammed al-Waili, the governor of Basra province, condemned the British for raiding the prison, an act he called “barbaric, savage and irresponsible.”
“A British force of more than 10 tanks backed by helicopters attacked the central jail and destroyed it. This is an irresponsible act,” al-Waili said, adding that the British force had spirited the prisoners away to an unknown location.
Aquil Jabbar, an Iraqi television cameraman who lives across the street from the Basra jail, said about 150 Iraqi prisoners fled as British commandos stormed inside and rescued their comrades.
Late Monday, the Ministry of Defense in London said the two British soldiers were freed after negotiations. A spokesman said he had no information suggesting they were freed as a result of overt military action but stopped short of denying reports that British armor crashed through the walls of the jail.
According to the British Broadcasting Corp., Defense officials insisted they had been talking to the Iraqi authorities to secure the release of the men but acknowledged that a wall was demolished as British forces tried to “collect” the two prisoners.
While the Shiite-dominated south of Iraq, where 8,500 British troops are based, has been far quieter than Sunni regions to the north, Britons have come under increasingly frequent attacks in recent weeks. The British military has reported 96 deaths since the war began in 2003.
That compares with the deaths of 1,899 Americans who are stationed nearer the violent insurgent regions around Baghdad and stretching west to the Syrian border.
The latest violence in the oil city of Basra, 340 miles south of the capital, began early Monday when local authorities reported arresting the two Britons, described as special-forces commandos dressed in Arab clothing, on suspicion of shooting two Iraqi policemen, one of whom died.
British armor then encircled the jail where the two Britons were held.
Television cameramen from Arab satellite broadcasters in the Persian Gulf were allowed to photograph the two men, clearly Westerners who were by that time sitting on the floor in the jail in bluejeans and T-shirts, their hands tied behind their backs.
One of the men had a bandage covering most of the top of his head; the other had blood on his clothes. Television commentary identified them only as Britons.
Outside the jail, a melee broke out in the streets as angry demonstrators attacked the encircling British armor with stones and Molotov cocktails. During the chaos, one British soldier could be seen scrambling for his life from a burning Warrior armored personnel carrier and the rock-throwing mob.
After nightfall, 10 British armored vehicles returned to the jail, crashed through walls and freed the two captives, witnesses said. An Associated Press reporter saw the vehicles smash into the jail.
It was not clear whether the tracked vehicles were Challenger 2 Main Battle Tanks or Warrior Infantry Fighting Vehicles, both in use by British forces in Iraq.
In other violence in Basra, Iraqi journalist Fakher Haider, 38, working for The New York Times, was killed after men claiming to be police officers abducted him from his home, the newspaper announced Monday.
In Baghdad, an Iraqi court sentenced one of Saddam Hussein’s nephews to life in prison for funding the country’s violent insurgency and bomb-making. It was the first known trial of any of the former leader’s family.
Militants waged more bloody attacks across the country Monday, killing 24 police and civilians and wounding 28.





