/ 6 October 2013

Bomber kills 15 in attack on school in Iraq

A soldier mans a checkpoint in Baghdad's Kadhimiya district on October 6 as Shi'ite pilgrims walk to a shrine to commemorate the death of Imam Mohammed al-Jawad.
A soldier mans a checkpoint in Baghdad's Kadhimiya district on October 6 as Shi'ite pilgrims walk to a shrine to commemorate the death of Imam Mohammed al-Jawad. (Ahmad al-Rubaye, Reuters)

A suicide bomber drove a truck packed with explosives into the playground of a primary school in northern Iraq and blew himself up, killing 14 students and their headmaster on Sunday, police and medical sources said.

The attack followed a suicide bombing minutes earlier on a police station in the same town, Tel Afar, about 70km north-west of Mosul city, where Sunni Islamist and other insurgents have a foothold. There were no casualties in the police station attack.

"We were exposed to two big explosions today in which dozens were killed or injured. The first was a truck bomb targeting a police station and the second was detonated inside the primary school," the mayor of Tel Afar, Abdul Al Abbas, told Reuters.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for either of the bombings, but such attacks are the hallmark of Sunni Islamist al-Qaeda, which views Shi'ites as non-believers and has been regaining momentum this year.

The majority of Tel Afar's residents are from Iraq's Shi'ite Turkman minority, which in recent years has been the target of killings and kidnappings.

"The fingerprints of al-Qaeda are clear on both attacks," said an official in the town who declined to be named.

More than 6 000 people have been killed in violence across the country this year, according to monitoring group Iraq Body Count, reversing a decline in sectarian bloodshed that had climaxed in 2006 and 2007.

Al-Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate was forced underground in 2007 when Sunni tribesmen found common cause with US troops and fought the group, but it has re-emerged this year invigorated by growing Sunni resentment of the Shi'ite-led government.

Relations between Islam's two main denominations have come under acute strain from the conflict in Syria, which has drawn Sunnis and Shi'ites from Iraq and the wider Middle East into a sectarian proxy war.

At least 60 people were killed on Saturday in two suicide bombings targeting Shi'ite. – Reuters