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Iraq bombings kill 33, undermines peace
talks
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD—A series of vehicle bombs and shootings has killed at least 33
people and wounded scores more across Iraq, stoking sectarian anger in
the run-up to a national unity conference. A car bomb exploded in a busy
market near the Al-Kamaliyah mosque in a mainly Shiite district of east
Baghdad, killing at least 10 civilians and wounding another 26, a
security official said Wednesday.
Bodies of the victims lay scattered around the street amid pools of
blood and the burning wreckage of at least two cars and a row of market
stalls set up by a nearby bus station. Two more car bombs were set off
later near the nearby Sunni Al-Samuri mosque in Baghdad Jadida, a mainly
Shiite neighbourhood, killing five day labourers waiting for work and
wounding 10.
The Samuri mosque is not far from the Kamaliyah mosque where the earlier
car bomb was detonated. The bombings mirrored an attack Tuesday, when
two suicide bombers blew their cars up amid another crowd of casual
workers, mostly Shiites, killing 70 and wounding more than 200 in
Baghdad’s Tayaran Square.
In another attack, two truck bombs smashed into a base of Iraq’s oil
infrastructure protection force, killing 10 soldiers and wounding six,
an officer on the scene said, adding that three civilians were also
injured. One after another, the trucks ploughed into the military base
near the town of Riyadh, 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the oil centre of
Kirkuk and along the pipelines carrying crude to the massive Baiji
refinery.
The Strategic Infrastructure Brigade, an army unit formed out of local
tribesmen, is tasked with protecting the northern oil fields and the
hundreds of miles of pipeline snaking across the plains of northern
Iraq. Iraq’s national security adviser, Muwaffaq al-Rubaie, said the
answer to the violence was to withdraw US troops from the capital to
enable them to chase Sunni insurgents while Iraqi forces put down
sectarian bloodshed.
“It is very important that the coalition forces should not be seen
siding with any factions. This is basically a war between the two
extremists, the Sunni extremists and the Shiite,” he said, in an
interview with CNN. “The multinational forces should not be in the
middle. This is a job for the Iraqi security forces,” he said, adding
that Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki had agreed this change of tactics
with US President George W. Bush. The surge in bloodshed came three days
ahead of a national reconciliation conference called by Maliki in what
might be his last chance to curb the violence. Saturday’s talks will aim
to bring the leaders of Iraq’s warring sects and political factions
under one roof to allow them to solve their differences without recourse
to the rival militias backing almost every party.
The conference will be boycotted by a Sunni religious body, the Muslim
Scholars’ Association, which is accused of links with some of the
insurgent groups fighting the US-backed government. Kurdish lawmaker
Mahmud Othman, a member of Maliki’s national reconciliation committee,
said there would be no point in inviting the association.
“The association’s continual rejection of the political process and its
announcement that it will not take part in this process make it
unnecessary to extend an invitation,” he said. Maliki, who is under
tremendous pressure from within his own ruling Shiite coalition, has
failed to bring security to Iraq and especially Baghdad, and the
sectarian war now threatens to turn into a regional conflict.
The New York Times reported Wednesday that King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia
had warned Vice President Dick Cheney two weeks ago during Cheney’s
visit to Riyadh, the daily reported, citing Arab diplomats. On Tuesday,
the White House said Bush will unveil a new Iraq strategy in early 2007
that will aim to tackle the sectarian bloodletting and facilitate an
eventual troop withdrawal.
US public support for the war has collapsed, with one poll showing that
only 15 percent of Americans think Bush can win. The president is
consulting with US diplomats and military officials as well as senior
Iraqi leaders in order to draw up a new strategy. Elsewhere in Iraq,
eight people were killed in rebel attacks, including five in the restive
city of Baquba, northeast of Baghdad. |