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Iraqi capital rocked by bombs leaving 30 dead
Three car bombs have hit the centre of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad,
in quick succession, killing at least 30 people. The attacks, which
injured more than 200 others, appear to have been aimed at foreign
embassies. The bombings shatter a period of relative calm after last
month's parliamentary elections. No-one has said they organised the
attacks.
The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says the insurgents want to send a
message that Iraq remains very unstable and unsafe. On Saturday,
gunmen killed 25 people believed to be linked to Sunni militias
opposing al-Qaeda in a village south of Baghdad.
Gunshots
Sunday's explosions went off within a few minutes of each other,
shaking the whole of central Baghdad and sending plumes of smoke
into the sky. "I saw children screaming while their mothers held their
hands or clutched them to their chest," one man told the Associated
Press news agency. "Cars were crashing into each other in streets,
trying to find a way to flee."
One bomb struck very near the Iranian embassy, shattering windows
throughout the area. The Egyptian, Syrian and German missions, in the
Mansour district, were also affected. Another bomb struck near the offices
of a leading pro-Iranian political figure, Ahmed Chalabi. Gunshots were
heard as emergency services rushed to the scene.
A spokesman for the political group headed by Mr Chalabi, the Iraqi National
Congress, said that its headquarters close to the Syrian embassy had been
targeted by a suicide car bomber, and that many of its guards and employees
were among the casualties. The authorities in Baghdad say security forces
shot and killed a man before he could detonate a fourth car bomb near the
former Germany embassy, which is now a bank. A number of Iraqi guards
working for foreign missions were among those killed. Egypt said several of
its staff were wounded by shrapnel. Spain said its embassy and the adjacent
German mission were also damaged.
Our correspondent says Sunday's attacks bore all the hallmarks of earlier
bombings, for which the Islamic State in Iraq - the umbrella group for militant
Sunni Islamist insurgents - took responsibility. But the same organisation
vowed to disrupt the general elections in March, which went ahead undeterred.
This was also the first wave of co-ordinated attacks in Baghdad for more than
two months, and the magnitude of each explosion was considerably less than
the massive bombs that struck government targets last year, our correspondent
says. Those attacks - last August, October and December - killed hundreds of
people.
[urlhttp://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/04/04/iraq.explosions/index.html?hpt=T2]Three deadly blasts rock Baghdad[/url] CNN
The Iraqi bridge to stability
Three car bombs have hit the centre of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad,
in quick succession, killing at least 30 people. The attacks, which
injured more than 200 others, appear to have been aimed at foreign
embassies. The bombings shatter a period of relative calm after last
month's parliamentary elections. No-one has said they organised the
attacks.
The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says the insurgents want to send a
message that Iraq remains very unstable and unsafe. On Saturday,
gunmen killed 25 people believed to be linked to Sunni militias
opposing al-Qaeda in a village south of Baghdad.
Gunshots
Sunday's explosions went off within a few minutes of each other,
shaking the whole of central Baghdad and sending plumes of smoke
into the sky. "I saw children screaming while their mothers held their
hands or clutched them to their chest," one man told the Associated
Press news agency. "Cars were crashing into each other in streets,
trying to find a way to flee."
One bomb struck very near the Iranian embassy, shattering windows
throughout the area. The Egyptian, Syrian and German missions, in the
Mansour district, were also affected. Another bomb struck near the offices
of a leading pro-Iranian political figure, Ahmed Chalabi. Gunshots were
heard as emergency services rushed to the scene.
A spokesman for the political group headed by Mr Chalabi, the Iraqi National
Congress, said that its headquarters close to the Syrian embassy had been
targeted by a suicide car bomber, and that many of its guards and employees
were among the casualties. The authorities in Baghdad say security forces
shot and killed a man before he could detonate a fourth car bomb near the
former Germany embassy, which is now a bank. A number of Iraqi guards
working for foreign missions were among those killed. Egypt said several of
its staff were wounded by shrapnel. Spain said its embassy and the adjacent
German mission were also damaged.
Our correspondent says Sunday's attacks bore all the hallmarks of earlier
bombings, for which the Islamic State in Iraq - the umbrella group for militant
Sunni Islamist insurgents - took responsibility. But the same organisation
vowed to disrupt the general elections in March, which went ahead undeterred.
This was also the first wave of co-ordinated attacks in Baghdad for more than
two months, and the magnitude of each explosion was considerably less than
the massive bombs that struck government targets last year, our correspondent
says. Those attacks - last August, October and December - killed hundreds of
people.
[urlhttp://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/04/04/iraq.explosions/index.html?hpt=T2]Three deadly blasts rock Baghdad[/url] CNN
The Iraqi bridge to stability