You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Iraq
Attacks kill 13 north of Baghdad
2013-06-23
[Al Ahram] Attacks north of Storied Baghdad
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
, including two suicide kabooms, killed 13 people on Saturday, the latest in a spate of violence stoking fears of a return to full-blown sectarian war in Iraq.

The latest unrest come as the country grapples with months of protests by its Sunni Arab minority, tensions in a swathe of territory that Kurdish leaders want to incorporate into their autonomous region in the north and protracted political deadlock in Storied Baghdad.

In the main northern city of djinn-infested Mosul, a suicide kaboomer set off a vehicle rigged with explosives near a police patrol on the city's southern outskirts.

The kaboom killed four people including a policeman, police and medical officials said.

And in Taji, just north of Storied Baghdad, a jacket wallah went kaboom! at a Shia mosque, killing at least four and wounding 20 others.

In the ethnically mixed town of Tuz Khurmatu, which lies at the heart of the area disputed between the Kurds and Storied Baghdad, gunnies opened fire on patrolling police, killing three and wounding a fourth, security and medical officials said.

The tract of land, which the Kurds want to incorporate over the objections of Storied Baghdad, stretches from Iraq's eastern border with Iran to its western frontier with Syria.

Diplomats and officials say the unresolved row is one of the biggest threats to Iraq's long-term stability.

And in the mostly Sunni Arab city of Tikrit, Death Eaters fired on day labourers waiting near a grain silo, killing two and wounding four, officials said.

Iraq has suffered an upsurge in violence since the beginning of the year, coinciding with rising discontent among Sunnis that erupted into protests in late December.

Analysts say a failure by the Shia-led authorities to address the underlying causes of the demonstrations has given bad turban groups both a recruitment platform and room to manoeuvre.
Posted by:Fred

00:00