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Local Editor A wave of more than 25 attacks across Iraq killed at least 92 people and wounded more than 350 on Saturday and Sunday, security and medical sources said, with the security forces and markets among the targets. While insurgents opposed to the Baghdad government are regarded as weaker than in past years, they are still capable of launching periodic mass-casualty attacks across the country. In the deadliest attack, two car bombs exploded in a market on Sunday near the Holy Shrine of Imam Ali (P.B.U.H) in southern Iraq, a security official said. Dr. Ali al-Alaa, a Maysan province health department official, said the blasts killed 14 people and wounded 60. Before midnight on Saturday, gunmen assaulted an army checkpoint near Balad north of Baghdad and a roadside bomb exploded when additional soldiers arrived at the scene. "Eleven soldiers, including two officers, were killed and eight wounded," an army colonel and a medical source at Balad hospital said. A police captain was also shot dead on Saturday night in the town of Garma, security and medical officials said. Early on Sunday, a car bomb exploded in a car park at the state-owned North Oil Company in Kirkuk in north Iraq, after which two other bombings in the city killed 10 people and wounded 153, said Sadiq Omar Rasul, head of the Kirkuk health directorate. "The two bombings in Kirkuk left body parts strewn in the streets, destroyed cars and damaged government buildings," an AFP correspondent said. West of Kirkuk, a car bomb seriously wounded six soldiers, army Captain Taha Khalaf said, while another in Hawija, also west of the city, wounded two people, security and medical sources said. Three car bombs exploded in areas of the Iraqi capital on Sunday night. A car bomb hit a market in the Washash area of west Baghdad, killing at least seven people and wounding at least 21, an interior ministry official and a medical official said. Another car bomb killed at least five people and wounded 22 near a restaurant in Shuala, while a third exploded in a commercial area of Hurriyah, killing three people and wounding 14, both in north Baghdad, the official and a medic said. Moreover, three soldiers were killed in clashes with insurgents in the Abu Ghraib area, west of Baghdad, an interior ministry official and a medical source from Abu Ghraib hospital said. And three car bombs in Taji, north of the capital, killed one person and wounded at least seven, while five roadside bombs exploded in and around Baquba, killing a soldier and wounding 17 people, security and medical officials said. In the former insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, west of the capital, a sniper shot dead a soldier, the military and a medic said. In Nasiriyah, south of Baghdad, a bomb exploded near a French honorary consulate, causing material damage and wounding an unspecified number of people, a French diplomat said. A car bomb also exploded outside a Nasiriyah hotel, killing two people and wounding two, local hospital head Ahmed Abdul Saheb and a security source said. Attacks in Tuz Khurmatu, north of Baghdad, killed four people, including a police captain, and wounded 31, the local mayor and police said. In the southern port city of Basra, a car bomb in a market killed three people and wounded at least 20, police and a medical official said. In Tal Afar, northwest of Baghdad, a car bombing killed two people and wounded seven, police and a medic said. Near Samarra, a city north of Baghdad, another car bomb killed two police, including Colonel Thair Idris, and wounded two, a police lieutenant colonel and a medical source said. And a car bomb in Mosul wounded seven civilians, while three police officers were wounded in another car bombing west of the city. No group immediately claimed responsibility, but Iraq's Interior Ministry blamed al-Qaeda in Iraq. "The attacks today on the markets and mosques are aimed at provoking sectarian and political tensions," the ministry said in a statement. "Our war against terrorism is continuing, and we are ready." This comes as Iraq's fugitive former vice president Tarek al-Hashemi was sentenced Sunday to death by hanging on charges he masterminded death squads against rivals in a terror trial. Hashemi fled to Turkey in the months after the Iraqi government accused him of playing a role in 150 bombings, assassinations and other attacks from 2005 to 2011. Most of the attacks were carried out by Hashemi's bodyguards and other employees, and largely targeted government officials, security forces and Shiite pilgrims. Hashemi declined to immediately comment on the verdict after meeting with the Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Ankara. He said he would "tackle this issue in a statement" in coming hours. The court convicted Hashemi and his son-in-law, Ahmed Qahtan, of organizing the murders of a security official and a lawyer who had refused to help the vice president's allies in terror cases. The two defendants were acquitted in a third case of the killing of a security officer due to a lack of evidence. The court sentenced both men in absentia to death by hanging. Hashemi - who has been in office since 2006 - is on Interpol's most-wanted list, but Turkey has shown no interest in sending him back to Baghdad. Source: News Agencies, Edited by moqawama.org |
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