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Iraq
Car blast kills seven in Baghdad
2010-05-14
[Dawn] Seven people were killed and 22 wounded after a car bomb planted outside a cafe exploded on Wednesday in a Shia area of Baghdad, police and a source at the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.

The bomb late on a hot early summer evening came two days after suspected al-Qaeda insurgents launched assaults across the country that killed more than 125 people in what officials said was a message that the weakened group was still a threat.

It also came amid continued political wrangling following a March 7 election that produced no outright winner.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily supported by minority Sunnis took a slim, two-seat lead in the parliamentary vote, but the main Shia-led alliances, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's bloc, have agreed to join forces to try to form a coalition government.

If they succeed, that could anger once-dominant Sunnis who supported the Iraqiya list of former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a secular Shia, and possibly fuel renewed bloodshed as US troops prepare for a sharp reduction in numbers by August.

The area in Sadr City where the bomb blew up on Wednesday evening was popular with young people, many of whom play dominoes into the evening.

Sadr City is a stronghold of fiery anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose militia battled US troops until a crackdown by the Iraqi military in 2008 throughout the Shia south and Baghdad ordered by Maliki.

Earlier on Wednesday, a bomb planted inside a grocery store in another mainly Shia area of Baghdad killed three people and wounded 23 others, police said.

Police said insurgents first killed the shop owner in front of his store in a popular market area in the Shula district of northwestern Baghdad and then detonated a bomb at the door of the shop when people crowded around the body.

The attacks bore the hallmark of Sunni insurgents such as al-Qaeda, who often target crowded, mostly Shia areas.

Gunmen and bombers killed about 125 people on Monday in a series of attacks across the country that included assaults on security checkpoints in Baghdad and car and suicide bombings in the southern oil hub of Basra and the southern town of Hilla.

The attacks showed that insurgents were still strong despite recent setbacks inflicted by US and Iraqi forces, including the death of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, in a raid in April.

Late on Tuesday, a roadside bomb blast killed five Iraqi police officers and wounded 14 others who were lured to a Baghdad market by the detonation of another improvised explosive.
Posted by:Fred

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