41 killed as violence rekindles in Iraq
Foreign Desk ReportBAGHDAD—Insurgents unleashed a series of car bombings and other attacks
across Iraq on Friday, killing at least 41 people, including three U.S.
soldiers, and wounding dozens of people a day after the country’s first
democratically elected government was approved.
Iraq’s most-wanted terrorist, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, purportedly
threatened more violence in an audiotape on the Internet, warning
President Bush the insurgents “will not rest until we avenge our
dignity”.
At least 11 car bombs exploded in and around Baghdad on Friday,
including four suicide attacks in quick succession in the Azamiyah
section of central Baghdad.
The first one hit an Iraqi army patrol, the second a police patrol and
the third and fourth at separate barricades near the headquarters of the
police special forces unit, police chief Brig. Gen. Khalid al-Hassan
said. Col. Hussein Mutlak said those attacks killed at least 20 Iraqis,
including 15 soldiers and five civilians. At least 65 were injured,
including 30 troops and 35 civilians, he said.
“We see these attacks as another desperate attempt by the terrorists to
discredit the newly formed Iraqi government,” the U.S.-led coalition
said in a statement, adding the violence was failing “to drive a wedge
between the Iraqi people and their right to choose their own destiny”.
Ambulances sped to hospitals and policemen crouched in fear after the
explosions in Baghdad, which set fire and caused heavy damage to the
special forces headquarters.
A U.S. soldier was killed and two others from the 1st Corps Support
Command were wounded Friday in a car bombing about 20 miles north of the
capital, the U.S. military said.
A car bomb attack near Diyarah also killed two U.S. soldiers assigned to
the 155th Brigade Combat Team, II Marine Expeditionary Force, the
military said. The statement did not provide additional details.
U.S. military spokesman Greg Kaufman said earlier that seven other U.S.
soldiers had suffered minor injuries in other attacks around Baghdad.
Late Thursday, another American soldier was killed and four wounded in a
roadside bombing in Hawija, a city about 150 miles north of Baghdad, the
U.S. military said. At least 1,575 members of the U.S. military have
died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003.
Insurgents also hit Iraqi forces with a coordinated assault in the
southeastern town of Madain, less than two weeks after Iraqi forces
raided the region to clear it of insurgents in an operation praised by
the U.S. military as evidence of the progress made by Iraq in assuring
its own security.
A roadside bomb was detonated, then two suicide car bombers drove from
different directions into police special forces as they arrived to
investigate, said police Lt. Jassim al-Maliky. A third car bomb targeted
another police patrol and a fourth detonated near the city hospital,
according to Iraqi police, who said the attacks killed 13 people and
injured 20.
Many of the wounded arrived covered in blood at the emergency section of
Madain’s al-Kindy hospital. Hospital staff ran to ambulances to assist
as a crowd gathered outside. A suicide attacker also blew up an
ambulance packed with explosives near a police special forces patrol in
Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, killing four Iraqis, including
two policemen, said police Brig. Gen. Adel Molan. Twenty Iraqis were
injured, he said. Maj. Steven Warren, a U.S. military spokesman, said
the bomber drove his vehicle up to a truck carrying the Iraqi troops.
Also in Baqouba, a Sunni cleric believed to be a senior member of al-Zarqawi’s
Al-Qaida in Iraq terrorist group blew himself up as Iraqi security
forces surrounded the city’s al-Aqsa mosque, Ali Fadhil of the joint
operation center said.
“Imam Abdul Razaq Rashid Hamid ... came out from the mosque with two
hand grenades as our forces were surrounding the mosque,” Fadhil said.
“He threw one of the grenads at the forces while blowing himself with
the second one.” Ten others inside the mosque were detained for
questioning, he said.
Warren, the U.S. military spokesman, could not confirm the identity of
the man killed, but said he was shot after walking out of a mosque
suspected of sheltering insurgents carrying a grenade. The conflicting
accounts could not immediately be reconciled.
A roadside bomb targeting an Iraqi border guard patrol also killed one
soldier and wounded two west of the southern city of Basra, said Iraqi
Lt. Col. Abdul Hadi al-Najar.
The violence came after Iraq’s National Assembly approved an interim
Cabinet lineup on Thursday, laying the groundwork for the first elected
government in Iraq’s history to take office.
The new Cabinet held its first meeting Thursday night to discuss a
handover between Prime Minister Ayad Allawi and his successor, Ibrahim
al-Jaafari. The incoming premier’s office said the handover would take
place on Tuesday.
U.S. officials had been pressing for a resolution to nearly three months
of political wrangling over the composition of the new Cabinet, worrying
the political vacuum was encouraging insurgents, who have staged a
series of dramatic and well-coordinated attacks in recent weeks.
But the Shiite-dominated Cabinet so far excludes the Sunni minority from
meaningful positions, which had been seen as a way to cut into
insurgents’ Sunni support base and help curb the violence.
Nearly a third of the 275-member National A |