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Worst
bombing in Baghdad since war kills 152
By
Ammar
Karim
AFP
BAGHDAD
Petroleumworld.com 11 24 06
In the worst attack on Baghdad since the war to oust Saddam Hussein,
insurgents killed 152 people on Thursday and wounded 236 in a series
of car bombings in the Shiite district of Sadr City, security and medical
sources said.
The attacks prompted the interior ministry to announce an indefinite
curfew in the capital, effective from 8:00 pm (1700 GMT).
Iraq also closed its two main airports, in the capital Baghdad and the
southern city of Basra, a senior government official said.
"As part of the indefinite curfew declared after the bombing in
Sadr City, Baghdad airport will remain closed," he told AFP.
Basra airport and three ports in the Basra region -- Um Qasr, Khor Jubair
and Al-Muaqqal -- will also close, said Samer al-Saqlawi, advisor to
the transport minister Karim Mahdi Saleh,
Wounded clogged the hospitals of Sadr City, with dozens lying bleeding
in the corridors as overworked staff struggled to tend to the casualties.
"Of those killed, 88 bodies are in the Imam Ali hospital and 55
in Sadr City hospital," a medic told AFP, saying many of the bodies
were burned beyond recognition.
A police official said other bodies were taken to hospitals outside
the district.
Hospital security forces kept at bay hundreds of relatives struggling
to see the dead and wounded.
The bloodiest bomb exploded in a crowded market in the Hay neighborhood,
targeting stores selling religious CDs, as well as electronics outlets
selling mobile phones.
In the increasingly bitter sectarian war gripping the capital, crowded
markets in Shiite neighborhoods and villages have been targets of choice
for the bombers of the Sunni-led insurgency.
In the market, the twisted frame of a car carrying the explosives sat
amid the wreckage of the shops, while pools of blood and debris from
the stores covered the ground.
As ambulances rushed to attend to the wounded, pillars of black smoke
billowed over the stricken neighborhood and inhabitants collected dismembered
parts of the dead.
Interior ministry spokesman Brigadier General Abdel Karim Khalaf told
state television Al-Iraqiya that police believe a total of eight bombs
were planted in Sadr City.
"Four of them exploded, one we have located and also arrested the
driver of the car, but three are still to be detected," Khalaf
said, without elaborating.
He also said 10 mortar rounds slammed into Sadr City after the bombings
and were expected to have caused casualties.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, in a national address broadcast
on television, said the Baghdad bombings posed serious dangers to the
country's Islamic brotherhood.
"This crime reflects serious danger on Islamic brotherhood by terrorists
who are trying to trigger sectarian strife," Maliki said on state
television, blaming politicians for fanning the strife.
And in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani
"urged people not to react illegally and maintain self-restraint
and calm," one of his officials said.
Minutes before the Baghdad blasts about 100 masked gunmen attacked the
Shiite-controlled health ministry, clashing with guards and Iraqi soldiers,
Deputy Health Minister Hakim al-Zamili told AFP.
"First a series of mortars were fired at the building from the
nearby Al-Fadhel neighbourhood, and then about 100 masked gunmen holding
machine guns attacked the building," said Zamili.
He said that he and about 2,000 employees were initially trapped in
the building but the attack was eventually beaten off, with only five
people wounded.
On Sunday, gunmen kidnapped Deputy Health minister Ammar al-Assafar
from his home in Baghdad's Adhamiyah district. Zamili himself escaped
an assassination bid on Monday, but two of his guards were killed.
The attack on the ministry mirrors a November 14 raid on the Sunni-controlled
ministry of higher education, in which at least 150 people were kidnapped.
In the aftermath of the attacks in Sadr City and on the ministry, some
13 mortar rounds rained down on Adhamiyah, a Sunni neighbourhood, wounding
10 people.
Explosions continued to reverbate through Baghdad well into the night.
Sadr City, the impoverished district of followers loyal to radical Shiite
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, was also the site of an early morning incident
involving American soldiers.
"US troops fired on a minibus carrying workers and killed a number
of them in Al-Falah street at 6 am," Imam Abdel Zahra al-Suwaidi
from the Sadr movement told AFP.
A
medic at the Sadr City hospital said four people were killed and eight
wounded, including two women.
The US military said Iraqi forces fired on the vehicle during a raid
to detain the leader of a kidnapping cell.
On Wednesday, a UN report said Iraq's sectarian conflict killed at least
3,709 people in October, the highest monthly death toll since the 2003
US-led invasion.
The figures, from data provided by the health ministry and morgues,
compared with a previous high of 3,590 in July, which the United Nations
at the time called "unprecedented."
The report came as US President George W. Bush and Maliki prepared to
meet in Jordan next Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the US military said three more soldiers were killed in Iraq,
bringing its losses since the invasion to 2,866, according to Pentagon
figures.
Police also recovered eight bodies near the central city of Diwaniyah,
while 12 people were reported killed in the city of Baquba.
AFP
23 2017 GMT 11 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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