Iraq attacks kill 60, raise sectarian fears

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Simultaneous early morning attacks on mostly Shi'ite targets across Iraq killed at least 60 people and wounded dozens on Thursday in one of the bloodiest days of violence since U.S. troops pulled out in mid-December.

The attacks that appeared to pitch al Qaeda-linked Sunni Muslim insurgents against Shi'ites raised fears of a return to the widespread sectarian carnage that tore Iraq apart and cost thousands of lives in 2006 and 2007.

The violence breaks weeks of relative calm as Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Sunni leaders have sought to resolve a political crisis that threatened to unravel their power-sharing agreement following the U.S. withdrawal.

At least 32 people were killed in blasts in Baghdad where 10 explosions tore through mainly Shi'ite neighborhoods during rush hour and other attacks targeted police patrols, commuters and crowds gathered in shopping areas.

"We were sitting at a restaurant having soup for breakfast when the bomb exploded. I lost consciousness and then saw smoke and dust when I came to. I saw people and body parts everywhere," police officer Ahmed Kadhim told Reuters.

Kadhim suffered shrapnel wounds to his left leg and back when a car bomb exploded near a restaurant killing six people and wounding 18 in Baghdad's northern Kadhimiya district.

The interior ministry blamed al Qaeda and affiliated armed groups for the attacks it said were an attempt to show that Iraq's security situation remained unstable.

The blasts hit just weeks before Baghdad plans to host an Arab League summit, which has been postponed because of regional turmoil and acrimony between Iraq's Shi'ite-led government and some Sunni Gulf states.

Holding a successful summit at the end of March would help Iraq restore its place in the Arab World since the U.S. withdrawal and help allay Sunni Gulf States worries over Iran's influence over Iraq's Shi'ite government.

"The attacks aimed to spark sectarian strife among the Iraqi people, and to prevent the Arab League meeting from being held," Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi said.

DOZENS OF BLASTS

More than a dozen blasts and attacks hit other cities across Iraq from Mosul in the north to Hilla, south of Baghdad, many of them targeting police.

The violence was aimed at Shi'ite neighborhoods but also against security forces, a frequent target of Sunni insurgents. Iraqi officials had predicted such groups would try to stir sectarian tensions with attacks after American forces went home.

While violence has ebbed since the height of the war, Sunni insurgents affiliated to al Qaeda are still capable of large-scale assaults. Some rival Shi'ite militias have said they will cease fighting since the U.S. withdrawal.

Islamic State of Iraq, an umbrella group for al Qaeda-linked insurgents in Iraq, has claimed responsibility for recent large attacks on the capital, including a December 22 wave of bombings that killed at least 71 people.

In Thursday's violence, one car bomb in the capital killed at least nine people and wounded 27 in the upmarket Karrada neighborhood, hurling shrapnel into the next street and blowing out glass from nearby buildings.

Witnesses saw at four wrecked cars full of shrapnel and bloodied seats near an ice-cream shop at the site of another blast.

In at least three Shi'ite neighborhoods in Baghdad, nine policemen were killed, and in the capital's northwestern Kadhimiya district, a car bomb killed six people when it struck a street lined with restaurants.

In the biggest attack outside the capital, a car bomb killed seven people and wounded 33 in the town of Balad, north of Baghdad.

Iraq's political crisis erupted after Maliki moved against two senior members of the Sunni-backed Iraqiya political bloc shortly after the U.S. troop withdrawal in December, prompting a walkout by Iraqiya lawmakers that lasted until late January.

Tensions eased as Sunni, Shi'ite and Kurdish blocs tried to negotiate an end to the crisis. But a week ago a panel of judges detailed 150 attacks they said were carried out by death squads under Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's command. Maliki sought Hashemi's arrest in December.

Hashemi, who has taken refuge in the autonomous region of Kurdistan, has denied accusations made against him, dismissing them as part of a plot to destroy Maliki's opponents.

The crisis was followed by a wave of attacks in December and January on Shi'ite neighborhoods, including a suicide bombing on a Shi'ite funeral procession that killed 31 in Baghdad and an attack on Shi'ite pilgrims that left 53 dead in Basra.

Violence had ebbed until Sunday when a suicide car bomber killed 19 people in an attack on a Baghdad police academy.

(Writing by Yara Bayoumy and Francois Murphy; Editing by Patrick Markey and Giles Elgood)

 

49 comments

  • rani  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    Lets analyse - christianity - teaches peace, Islam - teaches peace, Buddhism - teaches peace, Hinduism - teaches peace, Jewism - teaches peace.....where does the problem lie??? Power hungry individuals, satanic desires and going against the instincts of human feelings...lets not pin point....lets unite..lets understand its a very strong lobby playing behind the curtains....LETS STOP BLAMING EACH OTHERS RELIGION.....
    • Haider 2 months ago
      But America want "piece"
    • Dion 2 months ago
      I agree with you Rani.
  • Dara  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    The US wants to come back to Iraq, and to do this, they had to make drama.
    • Joseph 2 months ago
      Your a tool. The US is still in Iraq.
  • Kothope  •  Juba, Sudan  •  2 months ago
    We expect after 50 yrs one disturbing Relion would have finished from the Earth.
  • ahmed  •  2 months ago
    Iraqis dont care anymore for these organized crimes againt them, they are much stronger than these crimanlas can imagine, politics and regional power fights is what is killing Iraqis every day, ما يصح الا الصحيح Baghdad will prevail.
  • sainula  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    USA is the only reason
    • Leysam 2 months ago
      why always the USA, are they the only blood-thirsty suckers?
  • Rose Torok  •  2 months ago
    Unfortunate nothing has changed there, the same old story till they will ALL kill each other and these's no one left. Wake up people life is to short.
    • Leysam 2 months ago
      life is too short? well, iraqis want life more shorter. that's why they are killing each other ... lol
  • Mico  •  Ad Dammam, Saudi Arabia  •  2 months ago
    The US wants to come back to Iraq, and to do this, they had to make drama and kill atleast 60 innocent people. They are using the Sunni-Shi'ite thing..they're fueling the fire..
    Also, media also is fueling the fire and I think its primary goal is to burn the world in hell through its bias and unrealistic report...
    • rockitopyro 2 months ago
      The US can come back anytime to Iraq without ever killing anyone or even you if they wanted to. Your bias and unrealistic approach to thinking is irrational and no proof at all!
    • Leysam 2 months ago
      so you mean, iraqis are happy to be used by the US and enjoy killing each other?
    • Joseph 2 months ago
      Mico, your also a tool. The US is still in Iraq.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Manama, Bahrain  •  2 months ago
    u should be shame when u said most hn shiait area ..there was terrorist attacke in many area , Mosul ,Tikrit ,Babyl and Baghdad ..i respect reuters .. but u the media who encourage the sectarian in iraq through your articels and that as well the target of who did this attacke ..be carfull please
  • Hadjout  •  2 months ago
    USA supported by salafist terrorists of Saudi Arabia are behind these crimes. Saudi Arabia has created Al Qaeda because a conflict allows USA to sell weapons and to maintain weapons factories to work. Chaos in Iraq, Syria, Libya, Somalia or anywhere serves the interests of US armament industry and their associates, amongst them Saudis and now Qatar who invested a lot in US armament companies. They create conflicts to sell their weapons. Saudi Arabia: satanic country who divided between Moslems, divided between sunny and chi'i... Division means fitna and conflict and then to sell arms. Saudi Arabia is not a country but a US company !!!
  • Mahdi Mahdi  •  2 months ago
    Death with rebels that support from USA & Israel
  • rawaa  •  2 months ago
    Poor saudia arabia they blame you whatever happens . my brothers till when we don't know our real enemy and put all the blame on our brothers in saudia arabia ???? they are arabs like us .muslims , we have the same blood . try to understand that .
  • محمد  •  Baghdad, Iraq  •  2 months ago
    السلام عليكم انا من وجة نظري لم تعجبي التعليقات فقط 4 تعليقات اخواني العرب واللة اكبر خونة بالعالم وخصوصا قطر والسعودية والامارات وسوريا والاردن والعراق وبعض البلدان المجاورة منها ايران وتركيا واوزبكستان ايضا وكما قال الشاعر العراقي رحيم المالكي عرب جيفة العرب يا ذلة التاريخ طز بعمر موسى وكأن من كان ماريد العرب فديوم توصلني انا ما محتاج كلب القاهر ابي عون انا اندل المجاد والمجد يندلني انا سن الصخر والنايبات هواي ينشف مايهن بس ما يطيحنني للعروبة من العرض للطول تستثني الخليج الكام عاوني
  • Yamik  •  Doha, Qatar  •  2 months ago
    REally a bad news for the whole human being
  • Mahdi Mahdi  •  2 months ago
    Death with rebels that support from USA & Israel
  • 1  •  2 months ago
    سایت طلا 99909
    Gold News
    www.99909.ir
  • 1  •  2 months ago
    سایت طلا 99909
    Gold News
    www.99909.ir
  • one world  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    To the Iraqi Government, why don't you get to know who is behind these attack and go after them with full force. And I don't mean here a gainst the Iraqi Sunnis.
  • Zaid  •  Baghdad, Iraq  •  2 months ago
    websites and Media keep distinguish between Shi'ite and Sunni to encourage a civil war to rise again. I live in Baghdad and yesterday bombing was neither in Shi'ite nor Sunni districts; Mansour is a crowded marketing area , A'adhamia (might be a sunni district) and two other public places. these are poletical conflects being solved in the Iraqi street. and one more other reason, Media is encouraging a civil war so the weaponry firms could marke a huge profit out of it and Iraq had proven as a good weaponry market.
  • rani  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    Mr Wilehm, not fair to blame the relgion.....Islam has never incurged such acts...if the people who claim to be so called muslims follow the religion wrongly....how can you blame the religion? it would be appropriate to say that these people are not humans after all...So please do not blame relgion.......where in the bible or the christian or catholic faith legalises Gay relationship???? can i say that christianity is the worst religion...if people indulge in such acts i cannot blame the relgion...its the people who are to be blamed and not the religion...islam teaches peace peace and peace, brotherhood....if hitler was a catholics or christian, can i say christianity is worst religion?.....dont you know the Propher pbuh was muslim.....so you mean he spread the worst religion??? Then i can say that your faith has spread the most vices in the world, wine, lesbians, Gayism, gambling, everything as all of this is legalised under the christian state.....what should i comment on this? worst religion.....??? I know christianity is the best religion but the followers like muslims are worst....hoping for peace and harmony among human beings....Peace be upon you!!
  • Nasrin  •  Dubai, Dubai  •  2 months ago
    When do you want to learn that all religions are just different paths to ONE GOD ONLY! So fighting between the different sects in ONE RELIGION has no meaning at all and it just helps the enemies of that specific religion to be happy and satisfied ! Wake up please!