Sunday, May 22, 2011

Wave of bombings strikes Iraq

More than a dozen blasts across mostly Shia areas in Baghdad target government and police, leaving at least 13 dead.
At least 13 people have been killed and dozens injured after a wave of apparently co-ordinated bombings hit mostly Shia areas in central Iraq on Sunday.
Most of the blasts occurred between 7am and 8am, during rush hour on the first day of the work week, and targeted police officers and government officials, though some hit markets and injured civilians.

The deadliest attack occurred in Taji, around 25 kilometres north of Baghdad. Police were responding a car bombing that had struck a US patrol convoy - causing no casualties - when a suicide bomber detonated his explosive vest amid the crowd, killing seven police officers and injuring at least 10 others.
In Baghdad, a car bomb in the Talbiya neighbourhood near Sadr City targeted the convoy of a colonel in the Interior Ministry. The colonel, a manager in the Ministry's internal affairs department, was not hurt, but five other people, including two of his bodyguards, were wounded.
Two other attacks occurred in Sadr City, including a roadside bomb that exploded near the General Hospital, killing two and injuring seven, and an improvised explosive device that exploded in a market, injuring six.
Other attacks in the city targeted police: Two roadside bombs that exploded in Wathiq Square killed one person and wounded 12, including two police, two traffic police and two civil defence officers. One bomb in Beirut Square in the centre of the city targeted a police convoy and wounded six people.
The Shia Amal neighbourhood in west Baghdad took the heaviest bombings; four improvised explosives and one car bomb detonated in a square near a federal police building, killing two people and wounded 15 others.
Another bomb in the Sadiyah neighbourhood injured three people.
Source:
Al Jazeera

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