/ 29 April 2007

Blasts rock Baghdad as Karbala death toll rises

United States forces fired an artillery barrage in southern Baghdad on Sunday morning, rocking the capital with loud explosions. Meanwhile, the death toll from a suicide car bomb attack in the Shi’ite holy city of Karbala rose to 68 as residents dug through the debris of heavily damaged shops.

The blasts in Baghdad came a day after the US military announced the deaths of nine American troops, including four killed in separate roadside bombings south of Baghdad and five in fighting in Anbar province, a Sunni insurgent stronghold west of the capital.

The size and the pattern of the explosions, which began after 9am local time and lasted for at least 15 minutes, suggested they were directed at Sunni militant neighbourhoods along the city’s southern rim. Such blasts have been heard in the evenings, but are rare at that time of day.

In a brief statement to the Associated Press, the US military said it fired the artillery from a forward operating base near Iraq’s Rasheed military base south-east of Baghdad, but provided no other details.

Iraqis in the southern region of the city said American and Iraqi forces had stepped up their operations in the Dora area of southern Baghdad starting on Saturday night.

Leaflets

Authorities in northern Iraq imposed an indefinite curfew in the Sunni stronghold of Samarra after leaflets signed by rival insurgent groups threatened police officers if they did not quit their jobs and promised to target any oil company that wants to explore in the area. The warnings to the policemen were signed by al-Qaeda in Iraq and threatened to destroy their houses if they didn’t comply.

Leaflets signed by a separate insurgent umbrella group calling itself the Mujahedin of Samarra warned against oil exploration in the area and were posted on the walls of mosques in central Samarra, 95km north of Baghdad.

Iran, meanwhile, said it was sending top envoy Ali Larijani to Baghdad in a signal that it is warming toward the idea of participating in an international conference on Iraq later this week in Egypt.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mohammad Ali Hosseini said Larijani will discuss the conference with Iraqi government officials, who have been pressing for Iranian participation to boost regional support for their wartorn country.

Karbala bombing

The blast in Karbala, 80km south of Baghdad, took place about 7pm on Saturday in a crowded commercial area about 200m from the shrines of Imam Abbas and Imam Hussein, major Shi’ite saints. The shrines, some of the country’s most sacred, were not damaged, police said.

Police first thought the explosion was caused by a parked car bomb, but Ghalib al-Daami, a Karbala provincial council member, said on Sunday it was a suicide car bomber in the busy commercial centre.

Residents on Sunday gathered around the large crater left in the road by the bomb, and pools of water left by firefighters fighting the blaze were still tinged red with blood.

Salim Kazim, the spokesperson for Karbala health directorate, said the casualty figures had risen to 68 dead after some of the wounded died and more bodies were found on the roofs of buildings or in the rubble, and 178 were wounded.

As police maintained a vehicle ban in the city, people began digging through the rubble of damaged shops, lifting debris from the powerful explosion, which had shot flames into the air.

”The explosion was so powerful that it threw me up into the air,” said Haidar Ismail, one of the many patients lying in overcrowded rooms at Imam Hussein Hospital with bandages covering their wounds and burns.

Saturday’s attack was the second car bomb to strike the city’s central area in two weeks. On April 14, 47 people were killed and 224 were wounded in a car bombing in the same area.

Ghalib al-Daami, a provincial council member who oversees security matters, noted how close the suicide bomber came to the Imam Abbas shrine, which with the others draws thousands of Shi’ite pilgrims from Iran and other countries. That suggested the attack was aimed at killing as many Shi’ite worshippers as possible.

”I did not expect this explosion because I thought the place was well protected by the police,” said Qassim Hassan, a clothing merchant who was injured. ”I demand a trial for the people in charge of the security in Karbala.”

Speaking from a hospital bed, Hassan said his brother and a cousin were still missing. ”I regret that I voted for those traitors who only care about their posts, not the people who voted for them,” he said.

The US military has warned that such bombings are intended to provoke retaliatory violence by Shi’ite militias, whose members have largely complied with political pressure to avoid confrontations with Americans during the US troop build-up.

In other developments on Sunday:

  • Two roadside bombs exploded in separate areas of a predominantly Shi’ite area in south-eastern Baghdad, killing three civilians and wounding nine, police said.

  • Gunmen seriously wounded Amal al-Moudares, one of Iraq’s best-known radio and television journalists, in an attack near her home in Baghdad, police said.

  • The Islamic State of Iraq, an umbrella group of Sunni militants that includes al-Qaeda in Iraq, claimed responsibility for a suicide truck bombing on Friday in the western city of Hit, saying it was targeting the police chief. The attack killed nine Iraqi security forces and six civilians, although police chief Hamid Ibrahim al-Numrawi and his family were unharmed.

  • In a statement posted on a militant website, al-Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for a suicide car bomb on Thursday that killed 10 Iraqi soldiers at a checkpoint in Khalis, a long-time flashpoint city 80km north-east of Baghdad. Ten soldiers and five civilians were wounded, police said.

— Sapa-AP