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BAGHDAD, Iraq — Sunnis Muslims, angered by the execution of Saddam Hussein and the way his hanging was carried out, took to the streets in mainly peaceful demonstrations in Sunni enclaves across the country.

A crowd of Sunni mourners in Samarra marched to a bomb-damaged Shiite shrine Monday and were allowed by guards and police to enter the holy place carrying a mock coffin and photos of the former dictator.

The protest took place at the Golden Dome, which was shattered in a bombing by Sunni extremists 10 months ago. That attack triggered the current cycle of retaliatory attacks between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, in the form of daily bombings, kidnappings and murders.

Meanwhile, the military today announced the death of a U.S. soldier by a roadside bomb southwest of Baghdad. The blast Monday wounded three others, including an interpreter, as they talked with local residents about sectarian violence, the military said.

A roadside bomb also killed three Iraqi civilians and wounded seven others in eastern Baghdad today, police said.

Also today, U.S. troops killed a suspected al-Qaida weapons dealer and two other people in Baghdad raids and Iraqi forces detained more than 60 suspects over the past week, the U.S. military said.

In Dor, 77 miles north of Baghdad, hundreds more demonstrators march to a dedication of a giant mosaic of Saddam. Children carried toy guns and men fired real weapons into the air.

Sunnis were not only outraged by Saddam's hurried execution, just four days after an appeals court upheld his conviction and sentence. Many were also incensed by the unruly scene in the execution chamber, captured on video, in which Saddam was taunted with chants of "Muqtada, Muqtada, Muqtada."

The chants referred to Muqtada al-Sadr, a firebrand Shiite cleric who runs one of Iraq's most violent religious militias. He is a major power behind the government of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

MAKASSAR, Indonesia — An Indonesian jetliner crashed into a remote mountainous region, killing at least 90 people. The airline said there were a dozen survivors, but the national aviation chief said today that report could not be confirmed."I hope the people are alive, but so far there is no clear information about that," Ichsan Tatang told The Associated Press.The Adam Air Boeing 737 sent out two distress signals before crashing Monday half way through its two-hour flight from Indonesia's main island of Java to Sulawesi, in the northeast of the sprawling archipelago.Rescue and search teams hiked through heavy rain and slippery forest paths for four hours today before reaching the plane's wreckage.Bodies and debris were scattered over 300 yards of jungle and jagged cliff face on Sulawesi island's western coast, said Lt. Col. Firdaus, a airforce officer who goes by only one name.Firdaus and other aviation officials said 90 bodies were found. Three of the 102 on board were American citizens, the U.S. embassy said, but it was not clear if they were among the dead. There were no other known foreigners on board.

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