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Iraq
Baghdad Bombs, One near Foreign Ministry, Kill 33
2014-02-06
[An Nahar] Bombings in Storied Baghdad
...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate...
, including three near the heavily-fortified Green Zone and the foreign ministry, killed 33 people Wednesday, the latest in Iraq's worst surge of violence in nearly six years.

The attacks, which maimed dozens more, came as security forces battle Death Eaters in the western province of Anbar, including the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
... the current version of al-Qaeda in Iraq, just as blood-thirsty and well-beloved as the original...
(ISIL), a powerful jihadist group that has exploited the chaos in neighboring Syria.

With violence at its highest level since 2008, diplomats have urged the Shiite-led government to reach out to Sunnis in order to undercut support for militancy, but Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has taken a hard line ahead of April's parliamentary elections.

Wednesday's deadliest bombings, which included at least one suicide kaboom, struck during morning rush hour, ripping through confessionally-mixed areas of the capital bordering the Green Zone, home to parliament, the prime minister's residence and the U.S. and British embassies.

The three kabooms killed 25 people and maimed another 35, security officials and a medical source said.

One attack was just opposite the foreign ministry, but accounts differed as to what caused the kaboom. Two security officials said the blast was caused by a boom-mobile, but witnesses said a jacket wallah was responsible.

The area surrounding the ministry has been hit by kabooms in the past, notably in August 2009, when a massive truck bomb devastated the building, and again ahead of an Arab summit in Storied Baghdad in 2012.

A suicide bomber also hit a restaurant, and a vehicle rigged with explosives exploded in a market for car spare parts, both close to the Green Zone.

Blood and pieces of flesh littered the scene at the restaurant, and soldiers said one of their comrades had wrapped his arms around the bomber in a bid to save others.

Later in the afternoon, three boom-mobiles in southeast Storied Baghdad killed eight people and left 32 more maimed, while a rocket attack on Haifa street in the center of the capital maimed five.

The day's toll could have been higher still, but security forces found a roadside kaboom near the oil ministry in central Storied Baghdad and carried out a controlled kaboom.

More than 1,000 people were killed last month, according to government data, as security forces have struggled to curb bombings and battle jihadists and other anti-government fighters who have seized territory in Anbar.

No group immediately grabbed credit for the latest attacks, but Sunni turban groups, including ISIL, have taken credit in the past for coordinated bombing campaigns in Storied Baghdad.

Troops make slow progress in Anbar

ISIL has also been fighting security forces in Anbar, a mostly Sunni desert region bordering Syria where, for weeks, Death Eaters have held parts of Ramadi and all of Fallujah,
... the City of Mosques, which might have somthing to do with why it's not called Center of Prosperity or a really nice place to raise your kids...
which lies on Storied Baghdad's doorstep.

Along with ISIL, other turban groups and anti-government tribes have fought forces loyal to the central government.

Security forces and pro-government tribal fighters have made slow progress in Ramadi after days of heavy festivities, and late Tuesday had retaken several neighborhoods from turbans, according to officers and an Agence La Belle France Presse journalist.

Families will be allowed to return to their homes within days, a general leading the operation said, after security forces check the areas for booby-traps and bombs.

In Fallujah, however, security forces have largely stayed out of the city in recent weeks fearing major incursions could ignite a drawn-out campaign with high civilian casualties and heavy damage to property.

The city was a bastion of the Sunni insurgency following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, and American troops there fought some of the costliest battles since the Vietnam War.

Ahmed Abu Risha, a prominent tribal leader in the Sunni Awakening movement, which allied with U.S. troops against al-Qaeda and now supports the government, said an attack on the city was imminent and urged anti-government fighters to lay down their arms.

Witnesses and a journalist in Fallujah said several different neighborhoods were targeted by shelling late Tuesday.

The stand-off in Anbar has prompted more than 140,000 people to flee their homes, the U.N. refugee agency said, describing it as the worst displacement in Iraq since the peak of the sectarian fighting.
Posted by:Fred

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