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Iraq bombings leave 12 dead
Foreign Desk Report
BAGHDAD—Sunni-led insurgents killed at least nine people with a car bomb
in a crowded vegetable market Friday, the Muslim day of worship, in the
second blast against Shiite civilians in as many days, police said. The
death toll rose to nearly 100 from the previous day’s attacks in another
Shiite town. Elsewhere, in the southern city of Basra, an Iraqi police
convoy was ambushed late Thursday, killing four policemen and wounding
one, said police Capt. Mushtaq Khazim.
The surge of violence before an Oct. 15 referendum on Iraq’s
constitution has killed at least 194 people, including 13 U.S. service
members, in the past five days. The insurgents have vowed to wreck the
referendum, whose passage is crucial to prospects for starting a
withdrawal of American troops. Al-Qaida in Iraq, the country’s most
feared insurgent group, has declared “all-out war” on the Shiite
majority that dominates Iraq’s government. Moderate Sunni Arab leaders
have urged their community to reject the constitution, saying it will
fragment Iraq and leave them weak compared to Shiites and Kurds.
U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad has been struggling to negotiate
changes to the charter in hopes of winning Sunni Arab support, and
senior U.S. officials in Washington have said they are confident that
Iraq’s draft constitution will be approved. But those officials also
have said that if the constitution is defeated, Iraq could descend into
anarchy. On Friday, a car bomb exploded in a bustling vegetable market
in the mostly Shiite city of Hillah, killing at least nine people,
including three women and two children, and wounding 41, said Dr.
Mohammed Beirum of Hillah General Hospital. The vehicle was parked when
it detonated at about 9:30 a.m. in the city 60 miles south of Baghdad.
As Iraqi police and soldiers sealed off the Al-Sharia vegetable market,
emergency workers lifted the wounded and dead into ambulances from
streets covered with pools of blood and debris. In Iraq, the
weekend is Friday and Saturday, and before heading to services in
mosques at midday Friday, the Muslim day of worship, many Iraqis shop in
their local markets. Jawad Khazim, 45, who witnessed the Hillah attack
from a nearby street, said he was temporarily deafened by the
explosions. “I saw a fireball rising from the marketplace, and
vegetables and human flesh flying through the air,” he said. He
condemned the insurgents for trying to kill Shiites and questioned why
they would target a crowded marketplace where minority Sunnis and
Christians could also be.
On Thursday, three suicide attackers exploded near-simultaneous car
bombs in the heart of the bustling, mainly Shiite town of Balad, 50
miles north of the capital, killing at least 99 people — including 13
children and four women — and wounding 150, police and hospital
officials said.
Apparently aimed at killing a large number of Shiite civilians, the
string of bombings started just before sunset Thursday when the first
blast ripped through an open-air market crowded with Iraqis buying
vegetables. The next bomb exploded at a bank just yards away, followed
by a third on a nearby street of clothing shops.
Most of the fatalities were civilians, though the wounded included the
police chief and four officers, said Dr. Qassim Hatam, the director of
Balad hospital. The victims also included an unspecified number of
Sunnis who run some of the stands in the market. New information about
the Balad attack emerged Friday, when police said the insurgents had hit
a police checkpoint in the city with six mortar rounds at the same time,
killing one civilian. U.S. soldiers based there returned the fire and
detained an Iraqi suspect from a nearby home after finding traces of
explosives on his body, the military said.
Insurgents in Iraq often have attacked forces and civilians racing to
the scene of suicide car bomb explosions with mortar or machine gun
fire. But until Thursday, Balad, the site of a major U.S. military air
base, had seen few major attacks. Also Thursday, the U.S. military
announced the deaths of five U.S. soldiers a day earlier in a roadside
bombing during combat in Ramadi, west of Baghdad, a hotbed of Iraq’s
insurgency.
It was the deadliest single attack against American troops in more than
a month, bringing to 1,934 the number of U.S. service members who have
died since Iraq’s war started in March 2003, according to an Associated
Press count. In Washington, the top American commander in Iraq said
Thursday that the process of withdrawing U.S. troops depends greatly on
the referendum results and elections set to follow if the constitution
passes. “The next 75 days are going to be critical,” Gen. George Casey
told the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Sunnis make up only 20 percent of Iraq’s population of some 27 million,
but they could defeat the charter because of a loophole in voting rules:
If two-thirds of voters in any three of Iraq’s 18 provinces vote “no,”
the referendum fails — even if an overall majority approves.
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