WORLD / Middle East
Bombers strike at Iraqi army, civilians
(AP)
Updated: 2007-04-27 09:27
BAGHDAD - Bombers struck an Iraqi army post northeast of Baghdad and
civilian targets in the city as violence across Iraq killed at least 72
people Thursday, including the bullet-riddled bodies of 27 men dumped in
the capital - apparent victims of sectarian death squads.
A US soldier secures the scene following a car bomb explosion in Baghdad,
Iraq, Thursday, April 26, 2007. [AP]
Still, the top American military spokesman insisted the US command felt
"very comfortable" that it is making "steady progress" in restoring order
in Baghdad.
"We are seeing those initial signs of progress being made," Maj. Gen.
William C. Caldwell told Associated Press Radio.
The violence came as the Democratic-controlled US Senate adopted
House-passed legislation calling for US troops to begin leaving Iraq by
Oct. 1. President Bush pledged to veto the measure, and neither body
passed the measure with enough votes to override a veto.
Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said Oct. 1 was too soon for a
withdrawal to start and criticized the Senate vote, saying it "sends
wrong signals" to armed militants.
The deadliest attack occurred about 9 a.m. when a suicide car bomber
killed 10 Iraqi soldiers at a checkpoint in Khalis, a longtime flashpoint
city about 50 miles northeast of Baghdad. Ten other soldiers and five
civilians were wounded, police said.
The city is in Diyala province, which has seen some of Iraq's worst
violence recently. Mostly Sunni Arab insurgents are thought to have fled
to the area to escape the security crackdown in Baghdad that US and Iraqi
troops launched Feb. 14.
In the capital, a car bomb exploded near Baghdad University, killing
eight civilians and wounding 19, including some students, police said.
Associated Press Television News footage showed an elderly woman
screaming, "Oh, my son," as she sobbed beside twisted debris.
Ahmed Jassim, who works in a nearby hotel, said he rushed outside after
hearing the explosion and helped carry the wounded to ambulances.
"The insurgents were surely targeting civilians because there was no
military presence in the area," he said. "I saw small pieces of flesh and
a small blood pool."
Four other civilians were killed and nine wounded when a roadside bomb
exploded near a market in central Baghdad, police said. The blast missed
its intended target - a passing police patrol.
In the city's sprawling Shiite Muslim neighborhood of Sadr City, US
troops killed three militants during a gunbattle, the military said.
Later in the day, a funeral procession was held in the district for an
Iraqi who residents said was killed in the fighting.
Two suicide bombers attacked an office of the Kurdistan Democratic Party
of Massoud Barzani, leader of the autonomous Kurdish region in northern
Iraq.
The blasts killed three security guards and wounded five, police said.
Casualties could have been worse if guards had not opened fire on the two
attackers, forcing them to detonate their explosives at least 50 yards
from the office, police said.
The bombing in Zumar, a town 45 miles west of Mosul, capital of Ninevah
province, was the second suicide attack this week aimed at the party in
that area.
In other violence, four insurgents were killed as the US targeted
suspected al-Qaida in Iraq militants near Taji, a US air base 12 miles
north of Baghdad, the US command said.
It said two women and two children were also believed to have been killed
during the fighting. "Unfortunately al-Qaida in Iraq continues to use
women and children in their illegal activities," US spokesman Christopher
Garver said.
Two civilians were killed and 12 wounded when mortar shells exploded in
the southern Baghdad district of Dora, police said. One civilian died and
four were wounded when a car bomb exploded in the Baiyaa district of
southwestern Baghdad.
At least 30 tortured bodies were found, including 27 who had been shot to
death and left in different parts of Baghdad and three decapitated bodies
found south of the capital.
In Tikrit, police said the wife and daughter of a Saddam Hussein cousin
were found slain at their home. The wife of Hashim Hassan al-Majid had
been shot and the daughter strangled, police Capt. Samir Mohammed said.
Their names were not released.
Al-Majid's brother is Ali Hassan "Chemical Ali" al-Majid, one of the most
notorious figures of Saddam's regime, who is on trial for his alleged
role in gassing Kurds and other abuses during a crackdown on Kurds in the
1980s.
Hashim Hassan Al-Majid, who held various posts in Saddam's government,
was arrested after the regime fell, Tajik residents said.
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