Dubai, Apr 12: As widespread looting continued in Baghdad, the US today announced that 1,200 police and judicial officials will go to Iraq to help restore order amid reports that Kurdish fighters were withdrawing from the northern city of Kirkuk while fighting between Arabs and Kurds in Mosul left 15 to 20 people dead and over 200 wounded. The US-led coalition, trying to restore calm in cities wracked by violence and looting since the regime lost power, called on Baghdad's police to return to work. US troops said the restoration of law and order will become a higher priority.
A correspondent reported that Shia Muslims were fighting gun battles with their Sunni neighbours throughout the capital.
In Washington, the State Department said it is sending 26 police and judicial officers to Iraq, the first component of a team that will eventually number about 1,200, to help restore order there. The group will be led by retired general Jay Garner.
In Kirkuk, Kurdish fighters began withdrawing and US forces are increasing their presence to establish control in the city which is a centre of the oil industry in the north. The move is vital to pacify Turkey which borders northern Iraq and opposes any moves to create an independent Kurdish state.
In the northern city of Mosul, 15 to 20 people were killed and over 200 wounded in fighting between Arabs and Kurds, hospital sources said.
"There are more than 200 wounded at 15 to 20 dead Arabs and Kurds since yesterday," said Muzahim Kawat, chief surgeon at the city's emergency hospital.

US Marines claimed that they have discovered an enormous cache of suicide bomb vests hidden in a school in a residential neighborhood of central Baghdad.
The black leather vests with wires running along them weighed about 8 kg and were filled with long rectangular blocks of C4 plastic explosive and hundreds of ball bearings.
The United States is also offering cash rewards for information that leads to the capture of Saddam Hussein, leaders of his regime and weapons of mass destruction, the US Central Command said in Qatar.
"Consistent with work we do in other parts of the world, Afghanistan for example, a rewards programme has been established for information leading to the capture of key leaders" of the Baghdad regime, Brigadier General Vincent Brooks said.
Coalition ground troops headed for Tikrit after overnight air strikes pounded the home town of Saddam Hussein which remains a possible stronghold for his regime.
US officials said marines in Baghdad recovered four journalists from a hospital in Baghdad.
They said one was dead, one was unhurt and the other two were taken to a field hospital south-east of Baghdad to be treated for injuries they suffered at the Palestine hotel in fighting as the US advanced to the centre of Baghdad last Tuesday.
A US delegation plans to meet Iraqi opposition leaders in Nasiriya on Tuesday to discuss an interim government.

Hundreds of Iraqis demonstrated in the centre of Baghdad demanding urgent action to combat the wave of lawlessness that has swept the city.
The protesters chanted slogans and carried placards demanding tighter security to prevent looting.
Few medical or hospital support staff are reporting for work and many patients have fled. Some aid groups still operating in Baghdad are finding their work increasingly dangerous and futile.
US defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld denied Iraq was falling into chaos.
"Free people are free to make mistakes and commit crimes and do bad things," he said.
"While no one condones looting, on the other hand one can understand the pent-up feeling that may result from decades of repression," he added. Bureau Report