Twin car bombs kill 88 in Baghdad market
IRAQ: Two car bombs ripped through a busy market in Baghdad on
Monday, killing 88 people in fresh violence of the kind that U.S. and
Iraqi forces plan to target in a new offensive in the lawless capital.
Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki blamed the car bombs on
followers of Saddam Hussein, whose botched execution last month angered
many among his fellow minority Sunni Arabs.
The midday blasts, less than a second apart, also maimed scores at a
second-hand goods market in Bab al-Sharji, a busy commercial area that
is home to both Sunni Arab and Shi'ite shopowners and traders in central
Baghdad.
Hours later, at least 14 people were killed and 40 wounded when a
bomb exploded in a town near Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, police
sources said.
"These terrorists ... imagine this will break the will of the Iraqi
people and incite strife," Maliki said in a statement that called the
Baghdad bombers "a coalition of Saddamists and terrorists".
Police put the death toll in the Baghdad blasts at 88, with 160
wounded.
Bodies lay charred in front of mangled market stalls, while private
cars helped ambulances ferry the wounded to hospital as firemen put out
the flames.
The casualties swamped the local Kindi hospital - many of the corpses
were lain in a row in the street outside, some covered with blue sheets,
along with a pile of body parts.
Last week at least 70 people were killed in a double bombing outside
a Baghdad university. Maliki also blamed those attacks on Saddam's
supporters.
The prime minister announced a major security plan for Baghdad
earlier this month, vowing to crush illegal armed groups "regardless of
sect or politics".
His critics say earlier attempts to stabilise the capital partly
failed because of his reluctance to tackle the Mehdi Army militia led by
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, a political ally. The Pentagon says the militia
has now overtaken Sunni Islamist al Qaeda as the biggest threat to peace
in Iraq.
Senior fellow Shi'ite officials say Maliki is now committed to
tackling Shi'ite militias, as demanded by Washington and the
once-dominant Sunni minority. Failure, they say, would reverse the gains
the Shi'ite majority has made since the U.S. invasion after centuries of
exclusion from power in Iraq.
Monday's blasts followed a relative lull in violence in Baghdad at
the weekend, although the same period was particularly bloody for U.S.
forces.
Reuters. |