Bombs
kill 20 Iraqis, target churches, US television anchorman hurt
By
Jay Deshmukh
AFP
BAGHDAD
Petroleumworld.com 01 30 06
At least 20 Iraqis were killed in rebel attacks and bombings on
Sunday, including six coordinated car bombs set off near churches,
while a roadside bombing wounded a US television news anchor and
his cameraman.
The latest rebel attacks came as the trial of ousted president
Saddam Hussein was thrown into fresh chaos, with Saddam walking
out and his half-brother Barzan al-Tikrit being ejected from the
court on the judge's order.
Before the trial started, at least 16 Iraqis had been killed in
a series of rebel attacks which were followed by the bombings
by churches in Baghdad and Kirkuk.
In central Iraq, Bob Woodruff, news anchor with US television
network ABC, and his cameraman Doug Vogt were seriously wounded
when the vehicle they were in hit a roadside bomb near Taji, north
of Baghdad.
The two were embedded with the US army's 4th Infantry Division
but were travelling in an Iraqi vehicle.
"The incident occurred near Taji and the two are now in hospital,"
a US military spokesman told AFP.
A statement from ABC News president David Westin said the two
were in serious condition and being treated at a US military hospital.
"It was a mechanised vehicle. At least it wasn't one of the
pickup trucks they usually drive around in. They were in the lead
vehicle and they were up in the hatch, so they were exposed,"
ABC White House correspondent Martha Raddatz told ABC's "This
Week" Sunday morning program.
Raddatz, who said she had been briefed by the US military, said
that both were wearing body armor, helmets and eye protection
when the improvised explosive device (IED) went off.
"They were both immediately injured, taken away. They are
shrapnel wounds. Both have them to the head," Raddatz said.
Woodruff was earlier this month named co-anchor of ABC's World
News Tonight programme, considered one of the premiere jobs in
US journalism, and had been on assignment for the network at the
time of the incident.
The two were in Iran earlier this month. They began their current
assignment in the region on January 24 by covering the Palestinian
elections and had travelled to Baghdad on January 28, ABC said.
Woodruff had previously reported on unrest in Iraq from Baghdad,
Najaf, Nassariya and Basra, and was embedded with the US marines
during the March 2003 invasion.
In Tikrit early on Sunday, Mahamud Daham Bidewi, an assistant
to the city's chief of staff during Saddam's regime, was killed
when rebels fired a rocket at his home.
In another attack gunmen killed a police captain in the northern
oil refinery town of Baiji, police said.
Ten Iraqis were killed and two wounded by a roadside bomb in Eskandiriyah
town, 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Baghdad, a police officer
from Hilla said.
A suicide car bomber blew himself up by an Iraqi army patrol,
killing four Iraqi soldiers, near Saddam's native village of Ojah,
located 180 kilometers north of Baghdad. Six other soldiers were
wounded, said Khaled al-Jabouri, a police officer from Tikrit
city.
Later, six co-ordinated car bombs and a roadside bomb went off
near churches across the Iraqi capital and in Kirkuk, police and
interior ministry officials said.
Three people died and 11 were wounded in the two Kirkuk car bombs,
police said.
Six more were wounded by the Baghdad car bombs, four of which
went off near four churches in Baghdad's Karada area. A roadside
bomb also went off close to a church in central Baghdad, but there
were no casualties.
Terming the bombings outside the churches as "a reprehensible
act that can only exacerbate sectarian violence," UN's Iraq
representative Ashraf Qazi called upon Iraqi authorities to preserve
the safety of all worshippers and the sanctity of places of worship.
In another incident, gunmen shot dead a former senior army officer
of Saddam's regime, east of Mosul
AFP
01/29/06
Copyright
© 2006 AFP. All rights reserved
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