|
Bomb kills 39
in Karbala
BAGHDAD—A female suicide bomber attacked a group of Shiite worshippers
near a mosque in Karbala on Monday, killing at least 39 people and
wounding 54, officials said. The worshippers were gathered at a sacred
historical site about half a mile from the Imam Hussein shrine, one of
the holiest sites for Shiites.
Karim Khazim, the city’s chief health official, said the 39 dead
included seven Iranians. Police said the attacker was a woman but
provided no other immediate details. Karbala is located about 50 miles
south of Baghdad. Police closed the area around the twin golden dome
mosques and blocked all roads leading to the sites. The site includes
tombs of Imam Hussein, the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson who was killed in
a seventh-century battle, and his half brother, also a Shiite saint.
Ali Hassan, 30, a clothing merchant who was wounded in the blast, said
he was standing near his stall “when I heard a big explosion and I felt
strong fire throwing me in the air.” “The only thing I know is there was
a big explosion and I saw bodies flying in the air,” said Hassan Khazim,
36, who was wounded in the face. “All the tight security measures
designed to protect us were in vain.”
Separately, a roadside bomb killed two U.S. soldiers Monday as they were
clearing a route north of Baghdad, the military said. The violence came
as Vice President Dick Cheney and Arizona Sen. John McCain made
overlapping visits to the capital, touting recent security gains and
promising to uphold a long-term military commitment to the country so
long as al-Qaida in Iraq is not defeated.
Explosions also struck earlier Monday not far from Baghdad’s heavily
fortified Green Zone, shortly after Cheney arrived. Helicopter gunships
circled central Baghdad, but no other details were immediately available
on the cause of the explosions. McCain, the presumptive Republican
candidate for president who has linked his political future to military
success in Iraq, met Monday with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki shortly
before the Iraqi leader began separate talks with Cheney.
Al-Maliki said he and the vice president discussed ongoing negotiations
over a long-term security agreement between the two countries that would
replace the U.N. mandate for foreign troops set to expire at the end of
the year. “This visit is very important. It is about the nature of the
relations between the two countries, the future of those relations and
the agreement in this respect,” the prime minister told reporters. “We
also discussed the security in Iraq, the development of the economy and
reconstruction and terrorism.”
McCain stressed it was important to maintain the U.S. commitment in
Iraq, where a U.S.-Iraq military operation is under way to clear al-Qaida
in Iraq from its last urban stronghold of Mosul, 225 miles northwest of
Baghdad. “We recognize that al-Qaida is on the run, but they are not
defeated,” McCain said after meeting al-Maliki. “Al-Qaida continues to
pose a great threat to the security and very existence of Iraq as a
democracy. So we know there’s still a lot more of work to be done.”
McCain, who arrived in Iraq on Sunday, told reporters that he also
discussed with the Shiite leader the need for progress on political
reforms, including laws on holding provincial elections and the
equitable distribution of Iraq’s oil riches.
At a news conference with U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and Gen. David
Petraeus, the top commander in Iraq, Cheney said that given the nearly
4,000 U.S. troop deaths and billions of dollars spent on the war, it is
very important that “we not quit before the job is done.”
Cheney credited reductions in violence to President Bush’s decision to
deploy an additional 30,000 troops to the war zone. He said one of
Bush’s considerations in whether to draw back more than the 30,000
before he leaves office will be whether the U.S. can continue on a track
toward political reconciliation and stability in Iraq.—Agencies
|