BAGHDAD (Reuters) - An Iraqi newspaper said on Monday that President Saddam Hussein has given orders to pay 25 million dinars (about $14,000) to air defence troops who succeed in shooting down a hostile aircraft. "In accordance of the leader‘s order, the Presidential Office will grant 25 million dinars to those who shoot down a hostile plane and 10 million (5,000 dollars) for gunning down a missile," the weekly Nabd al-Shabab (Pulse of Youth) said. The paper also said that a sum of "five million dinars (2,500 dollars) will be granted to anyone who arrests an enemy pilot who falls into our territory". U.S. and British warplanes hit targets in northern and southern Iraq on Sunday after U.S. jets fired missiles at six Iraqi air defence sites around the northern city of Mosul the previous day. Baghdad has rejected Western-imposed no-fly zones over southern and northern Iraq. The zones were established after the 1991 Gulf war, ostensibly to protect Shi‘ite and Kurdish communities from Iraqi forces.