Sunday, September 15, 2013
Iraq violence: Bombs cause mayhem across Iraq
A fresh wave of bombs has killed more than 40
people across Iraq - mostly targeting Shia
areas - officials say.
The deadliest was in the city of Hilla, south of the
capital Baghdad, where two car bombs at a market
killed at least 15 civilians.
Other bombs hit Baghdad itself as well as Basra,
Nasiriya and Karbala in the south of the country.
Sectarian violence has surged across Iraq in recent
months, reaching its highest level since 2008.
More than 5,000 people have been killed so far this
year in Iraq, 800 of them in August alone, according
to the United Nations.
Son injured
In Hilla, about 95km (60 miles) south of Baghdad,
two parked car bombs exploded simultaneously near
a busy market, police said.
Abu Ahmed, who runs a grocery store, told Reuters
news agency that he had stepped out of his shop
when the two explosions occurred.
"I ran to check on my son who was covering for me in
my shop and found him covered with blood among
many other bodies. There is no trace left of my shop,"
he said.
Some of the other attacks included:
In Iskandariya, some 50km (30 miles) south of the
capital, a car bomb hit a parking lot, killing four
civilians and wounding nine, police said
Another bomb went off in an industrial area of
Karbala, killing at least four
Another nine died in and around Kut, another Shia-
dominated city
Eight people were killed in the southern cities of
Basra and Nasiriya
In Baghdad three security personnel were killed
when a car bomb exploded near the convoy of the
head of provincial council official in the Sunni-
dominated Azamiya district. Two more civilians
were killed when a bomb hit a police patrol in
Baghdad's western suburbs.
On Saturday, more than 20 people died when a
suicide bomber targeted the funeral of a member of
the Shabak people near Mosul, the capital of Nineveh
province. The Shabak - about 50,000 people who
largely follow a faith considered an offshoot of Shia
Islam - are frequently targeted in attacks by Sunni
militants.
And on Friday, at least 30 people died in a bomb
attack on a Sunni mosque in the central city of
Baquba.
In recent weeks, Iraqi security forces have reportedly
arrested hundreds of alleged al-Qaeda members in
and around Baghdad as part of a campaign the Shia-
led government is calling "Revenge for the martyrs".
But the operations, which have taken place mostly in
Sunni districts, have angered the Sunni community
and failed to halt the violence.
The country has also seen a spillover of violence from
the conflict in Syria, which has taken on increasingly
sectarian overtones.
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