71. Tribunal sources said the team would be checking on the condition of the suspected grave sites and checking the area for mines. 72. U.N. weapons experts are ready to resume work in Iraq although recent U.S.-British airstrikes damaged monitoring equipment at many suspected sites, a senior inspector says. 73. U.N. weapons inspectors have watched Iraqis burn documents at suspected sites and dump the ashes into nearby rivers, an arms inspector said Tuesday. 74. Two other suspected sites are also being investigated, Dusan Mihajlovic added. 75. U.N. officials also spoke of possible mass graves in the Knin area and the IHF team cited four suspected sites. 76. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan announced in Baghdad a deal with Iraq over U.N. inspections of suspected sites for producing weapons of mass destruction. 77. U.S. officials say there are a number of similar, suspected sites they are checking one by one for intelligence information. 78. Weapons inspection teams require Iraqi escorts to pass the security guards at suspected sites. 79. Weapons inspection chief Richard Butler said the U.N. inspection teams would keep trying to gain access to suspected sites. 80. Weapons inspection teams require Iraqi escorts to pass security guards at suspected sites. |