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Suicide bomber kills 40 in Iraq
Middle East Desk Report
KERBALA (Iraq)—A suicide bomber targeting pilgrims heading to one of
Shi’ite Islam’s holiest festivals killed 40 people, including women and
children, south of Baghdad on Sunday, police said. Police and the U.S.
military said the bomber struck in the town of Iskandariya, 40 km (25
miles) south of Baghdad, hours after militants killed three pilgrims and
wounded 36 others in an attack in southern Baghdad, police said.
Police said 40 people were killed and 46 wounded, despite a major
tightening of security. The U.S. military had said hospital officials
were reporting 25 dead and 50 wounded. The military said in a statement
that the attack took place on a two-lane highway near a residential area
where about 42,000 pilgrims had passed through earlier in the day.
Tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers and police have been deployed for
the Arbain festival after suspected Sunni Arab insurgents killed 149
pilgrims on their way to Kerbala for the event last year, in one of the
worst spasms of violence since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
The pilgrims are particularly vulnerable to attack because many prefer
to walk to Kerbala, 110 km (70 miles) south of Baghdad. They believe the
effort will bring them greater spiritual reward. In the Baghdad attack,
the pilgrims were hit by a roadside bomb and then fired on by gunmen on
a road used by thousands of pilgrims walking to the festival of Arbain
in the holy southern Shi’ite city of Kerbala, police said.
The U.S. military gave a different account, saying gunmen had lobbed
hand grenades at the pilgrims in Baghdad, killing one and wounding 17.
It said U.S. and Iraqi forces would increase patrols and checkpoints,
restricting vehicle access through key routes to Kerbala from southern
Baghdad.
Millions of Shi’ite pilgrims are expected in Kerbala for Arbain this
week, which commemorates the end of the 40-day mourning period following
Ashura, a religious ritual that marks the death of Prophet Mohammad’s
grandson in 680.
Kerbala’s police chief, Major-General Raad Shakir, told Reuters last
week that 40,000 police and soldiers had been deployed and that Iraqi
tanks were being used to protect the city for the first time.
All public transport, including bicycles, has been banned within a 25 km
(15.5 mile) radius of the city, and 600 female security staff have been
assigned to search women, police said. Militants have used horses and
carts, bicycles and motorcycles in bomb attacks in the past. There has
also been a spate of suicide bombings carried out by women in recent
months.
In previous years, militants have killed scores of pilgrims in suicide
bombings and other attacks. Sunni Islamist al Qaeda views Shi’ites, a
majority in Iraq but a minority in the Muslim world, as heretics.
Last August, clashes between rival Shi’ite factions during another
religious festival in Kerbala killed dozens of people and forced the
hurried evacuation of hundreds of thousands of pilgrims.
The attack in Iskandariyah, south of Baghdad, was the second of the day
against pilgrims traveling to the holy city of Karbala. The pilgrimage
marks Arbaeen, the 40th day following the anniversary of the martyrdom
of Imam Hussein, one of two revered Shiite figures buried there. The
suicide bomber detonated at a tent where pilgrims stop to eat and drink,
police said.
Earlier, extremists attacked another group of pilgrims in the
predominantly Sunni Baghdad neighborhood of Dora, killing three and
wounding 36, police said. The attacks heightened tension around Arbaeen,
when millions of pilgrims descend on Karbala, about 50 miles south of
the capital.
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