Scores killed in Iraq blasts | |||
| |||
At least 60 people have been killed and scores more wounded in a series of attacks in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, police say. Two car bombs exploded at a market in Sadr City killing 39 people and injuring 56 others, while three separate car bombs and an improvised device killed 11 in the west and east of Baghdad, officials said on Friday. Mike Hanna, Al Jazeera's correspondent in the capital, said four of the attacks were in Shia areas and two of them in Sunni neighbourhoods. "At this time it would appear that the attacks are being targeted at the civilian population in general, rather than any sectarian basis," Hanna said. Earlier on Friday seven people were killed and 18 others wounded after six roadside bombs exploded in Iraq's western Anbar province. The bombs went off near the houses of a judge and police officers in the town of Khalidiya, about 83km west of Baghdad, the capital. "Four homes were hit by homemade bombs and C4 [plastic explosive]," Lieutenant Khoder Ahmed al-Alwani, a police officer, said. "This is the second assassination attempt against me this month. They put a sticky bomb on my car but it was discovered," he told an AFP news agency correspondent at the scene. "When we entered the premises, there was a second blast which caused the death of a soldier." The police chief said they discovered a large store of TNT and other explosives but had "yet to recover the remains of the terrorists who were in the building". Al-Qaeda hunt The blasts come four days after a string of blows against al-Qaeda by Iraqi security forces. Nouri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, announced on April 19 that an Iraqi intelligence team had hunted down and killed Abu Ayub al-Masri, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, and Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, the purported leader of al-Qaeda's local affiliate, the Islamic State of Iraq. "It's impossible at this stage to say whether there is a connection between these killings ... and the bombings we are seeing in Baghdad," Al Jazeera's correspondent said. "But at this stage it would appear to be an opportunistic attempt to take advantage of the ongoing political uncertainly because there is no agreement about forming a government. Violence in Iraq has fallen in the last two years as the sectarian bloodshed that followed the 2003 US-led invasion faded, but tensions increased last month after a national election resulted in no clear winner. |
sexta-feira, 23 de abril de 2010
[ Download ]
Marcadores:
NOTICIAS