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Posts Tagged ‘bombings’

Iraqi Prime Minister Malaki vows to defeat terrorism

August 22nd, 2009 admin No comments

In his first public statement since the Wednesday’s carnage, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki assured Iraqis that its forces would defeat terrorism despite the year’s deadliest bombings.  His address ignored remarks from a minister that the government had fallen into a false sense of security.

A few hours earlier, his foreign minister, Hoshiyar Zebari, said he suspected police or soldiers might have colluded in the attacks.  Zebari also criticized Maliki’s decision to remove most blast walls from Baghdad’s streets, indicating it was one cause of the blasts.

In his address, Maliki said the perpetrators of the bombings on the foreign and finance ministries had been captured.  “I want to tell the Iraqi people we are still in an open war against (the terrorists),” he said on state television. “I reassure the Iraqi people that the security forces can keep up the battle and achieve victory despite breaches here and there.”

These suicide truck bombings, effectively shattered the growing sense of stability in Iraq since the U.S. troops pulled out of urban centers and handed over security responsibility to their Iraqi counterparts.

They also dealt a crippling blow to Maliki himself as he prepares to contest the national election next January, looking to claim credit for a sharp fall in overall violence in the past 18 months, and public confidence in Iraq’s domestic security forces.

Foreign Minister Zebari summoned the media earlier today to his wrecked ministry and said he suspected police or soldiers must have helped.

“According to our information, there has even been collaboration between security officers and the murderers and killers,” he said, calling for a thorough investigation.

Zebari offered no direct evidence for the accusation, but said checkpoints and blast walls near the ministry had been removed due to a “false sense” of security.

Blast walls were piled up outside the ministry today in preparation for being reinstalled.

Iraq detains security officers after carnage in Baghdad

August 20th, 2009 admin No comments

Iraqi officials are questioning 11 security officers about security failures that resulted in the bloodiest day in Baghdad in more than a year.

The Iraqi government raised the death toll from Wednesday’s Baghdad bomb and mortar attacks to at least 100. More than 500 other people were wounded.

An Iraqi army spokesman said there are regulations instructing security officers to prohibit trucks of the sort that exploded Wednesday from approaching government ministries.

But even the tightened security Thursday failed to prevent another bombing in the Iraqi capital.  Officials say a bomb strapped to a bicycle killed two people and wounded at least 10 in central Baghdad.

After Wednesday’s bloodshed, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki vowed an immediate re-evaluation of the government’s security methods. Read more…

Bombings surrounding Shia festival in Iraq kill 36

August 7th, 2009 admin No comments

Bombings of a Shia mosque and a bus full of pilgrims killed at least 36 people as Iraq’s Shia community celebrates one of its biggest feasts.

View Karbala, Iraq in a larger map

Pilgrims have been swarming in and out of Karbala, about 40 miles south of Baghdad, to mark the birth of a historic religious figure, placing Iraqi and American security forces on high alert.

The first bomb went off as worshipers were leaving a mosque after Friday prayers near the northern city of Mosul, killing 30.   According to the BBC, police said at least 61 people had also been wounded in the blast, and the number of casualties was likely to rise.

City authorities are urging citizens to donate blood and appealed for construction vehicles to lift debris trapping victims of the attack, Rueters says.

“I was in the house when this explosion happened,” said 19-year-old Khalil Qasim through his tears.

“I hurried to the mosque to search for my father in the ruins… I found him seriously wounded, and took him to hospital, but he died.”

Meanwhile, a bus full of pilgrims returning to Baghdad was struck by a roadside bomb as it entered the Shia area of Sadr City,  The blasts killed six and injured many other returning pilgrims, police said.

An attack Thursday evening killed at least one person making their way to the festival and injured three.

Violence surrounding this festival is not uncommon.  According to the BBC, the hundreds of thousands of Shia pilgrims who gather in Karbala to mark the birth of Mohammed al-Mehdi – the 12th and last Shia Imam, known as the Hidden Imam – have often been targeted by attacks in the past.