Perilous
Times
74 dead in Iraq's deadliest day in a year
Ali al-Alaak
August 16, 2011
AFP
Attacks in more than a dozen cities have killed 74 people
nationwide, including 40 in twin blasts blamed on al-Qaeda in the
southern city of Kut, in Iraq's bloodiest day in more than a year.
The surge of violence raises questions over the capabilities of
Iraq's forces after its leaders agreed this month to open talks
with the United States over a military training mission to last
beyond a projected year-end American withdrawal.
The attacks, which took place in 18 cities and also wounded more
than 300 people, were quickly condemned by the White House and the
United Nations, as Iraqi parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi
blamed security leaders for unspecified "violations".
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In the worst attack, a roadside bomb in the centre of Kut, 160km
south of Baghdad, at 8am local time was followed minutes later by
a nearby car bomb.
"I was on my way to my shop in the market and suddenly I felt
myself being thrown to the ground," said 26-year-old Saadun
Muftin, speaking from the city's Karama hospital.
"After that I found myself in the hospital with wounds all over my
body."
Another shopkeeper, Mohammed Jassim, described "smoke everywhere"
in the square where the blasts took place.
Ghalid Rashid Khazaa, health spokesman for Wasit province, of
which Kut is the capital, put the toll at 40 dead and 65 wounded,
with women and children among the casualties.
The attack was the worst single incidence of violence in Iraq
since March 29, when al-Qaeda commandos staged a massive assault
on provincial government offices in Saddam Hussein's hometown of
Tikrit, that killed 58 people.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki condemned Monday's attacks, and
said those who carried them out "won't get away with these
crimes".
"The security forces should not let these killers breathe ... Any
respite means that we are putting Iraqi blood at risk."
The violence, the deadliest since May 2010, shattered a relative
calm in Iraq during the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan,
which began at the start of August. There were no immediate claims
of responsibility.
"Today's attacks were not a surprise," said Baghdad security
spokesman Major General Qassim Atta, who said several other
attacks planned for Monday had been disrupted.
"Every three or four months, al-Qaeda carries out operations in
order to prove they are still here."
US and Iraqi commanders say that while al-Qaeda and other
insurgent groups are markedly weaker compared to the peak of
Iraq's sectarian war in 2006 and 2007, they are still capable of
carrying out massive attacks.
Spokesmen for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the White House
separately condemned the attacks, but White House spokesman Jay
Carney noted that "the overall picture is one where violence has
been down".
Iraqi politicians said on August 3 they would hold talks with the
US over a security training mission to last beyond 2011, when all
47,000 American soldiers must withdraw under the terms of a 2008
bilateral security pact.
Also on Monday, eight gunmen wearing army uniforms stormed a
mosque in the town of Yusifiyah at 9.30pm local time, calling
seven anti-al-Qaeda militiamen by name before taking them outside
and killing them in front of bystanders, an interior ministry
official said.
The official said the gunmen identified themselves as members of
the Islamic State of Iraq, al-Qaeda's front group, before fleeing.
In Tikrit, meanwhile, three policemen were killed and at least
seven wounded when two suicide bombers detonated their
explosives-packed vests inside the city's anti-terror
headquarters.
The attackers were wearing police uniforms and sought,
unsuccessfully, to free al-Qaeda fighters being held in a jail in
the office.
In the restive province of Diyala, north of Baghdad, eight people,
including four soldiers, were killed and 35 wounded in a series of
attacks in provincial capital Baquba and five other cities, Diyala
health department spokesman Faris al-Azzawi said.
Two car bombs, the second of which was set off by a suicide
attacker, blew up in the holy Shi'ite city of Najaf, provincial
police chief General Abdul Karim Mustafa said.
A provincial health spokesman said seven people were killed and 60
wounded.
A car bomb east of Karbala, another holy city in Iraq's south,
killed three people and wounded 63 others, provincial health
director Nidhal Mehdi said.
Separate explosions in the disputed northern city of Kirkuk killed
one and wounded 14, while twin blasts in the western city of
Ramadi left one dead and injured seven others.
Two car bombs and three roadside bombs killed two people and
wounded 30 in Baghdad, and bomb attacks in Taji and Balad, just
north of the capital, killed one and injured 14.
Twin blasts in the northern city of Mosul also left one dead and
three wounded, police said, and an explosion in the town of
Iskandiriyah, south of Baghdad, injured four.
© 2011 AFP