An Entity of Type: societal event, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

The Battle of Majar al-Kabir was the result of a growing distrust between the British military and the local people of the south-eastern region of Iraq over house searches and confiscation of personal weapons that locals felt were crucial for their self-protection. Despite a signed agreement between local people and British forces stating that the British would not enter the town, the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment started patrolling in the town of Majar al-Kabir on 24 June 2003 the day after the agreement was signed by both sides. The British thought the agreement was to stop the weapons searches that involved going into the houses of local inhabitants.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • The Battle of Majar al-Kabir was the result of a growing distrust between the British military and the local people of the south-eastern region of Iraq over house searches and confiscation of personal weapons that locals felt were crucial for their self-protection. Despite a signed agreement between local people and British forces stating that the British would not enter the town, the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment started patrolling in the town of Majar al-Kabir on 24 June 2003 the day after the agreement was signed by both sides. The British thought the agreement was to stop the weapons searches that involved going into the houses of local inhabitants. At first, angry locals stoned the Paras whilst being encouraged by anti-British rhetoric being chanted from microphones on minarets in the town. The Paras used rubber bullets to try and bring the situation under control, followed by conflicted reports about who fired the first live shots; this led to street battles, rifle fire and the cornering of six Royal Military Policemen (RMP) in the police station at Majar al-Kabir. The six RMP were killed by an angry mob of up to 600 people whilst maintaining a defensive position within the police station. Four Iraqi civilians were killed and at least eleven more were injured during the riot that led to the RMP personnel being cornered. The number of British troops injured numbered eight, though only one was injured through being in a firefight in the town. A Quick Reaction Force (QRF) was deployed from Camp Abu Naji and air support came in the form of one Gazelle and one Chinook helicopter. The Chinook incurred enough airframe damage from Iraqi gunfire that it could not land its QRF element in the town and had to return to Abu Naji where it offloaded seven seriously injured troops. The death of the six RMP was one of the most controversial occurrences of the Iraq Campaign involving British forces and remains a controversial subject within political and military circles. (en)
dbo:causalties
  • 6 killed, 8 wounded
dbo:combatant
  • Local people
dbo:date
  • 2003-06-24 (xsd:date)
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  • *156 Provost Company(Royal Military Police)
  • *1st Battalion Parachute Regiment
  • 400–600 (estimated)
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  • 4 (xsd:integer)
  • 6 (xsd:integer)
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  • Local people (en)
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  • Battle of Majar al-Kabir (en)
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  • 2003-06-24 (xsd:date)
  • June 2020 (en)
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  • Location within Iraq (en)
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  • Majar al-Kabir (en)
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  • Iraq (en)
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  • 400 (xsd:integer)
  • * 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment * 156 Provost Company (en)
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  • The Battle of Majar al-Kabir was the result of a growing distrust between the British military and the local people of the south-eastern region of Iraq over house searches and confiscation of personal weapons that locals felt were crucial for their self-protection. Despite a signed agreement between local people and British forces stating that the British would not enter the town, the 1st Battalion Parachute Regiment started patrolling in the town of Majar al-Kabir on 24 June 2003 the day after the agreement was signed by both sides. The British thought the agreement was to stop the weapons searches that involved going into the houses of local inhabitants. (en)
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  • Battle of Majar al-Kabir (en)
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