http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4180099.html
 

Iraqi violence unabated with at least 24 killed around the country
Updated 9/12/2006 8:06 AM ET
USATODAY 
BAGHDAD (AP) - A parked car bomb detonated Tuesday in Baghdad's upscale
Mansour neighborhood, killing at least six people and wounding 18 others as
violence remained unabated around Iraq.
Bombings, mortar attacks and shootings overnight and on Tuesday left at
least 24 people dead and dozens wounded around Iraq, police and military
officials said.
In Middadiyah, a town just outside the city of Baqouba northeast of the
capital, a roadside bomb next to a market killed at least four people and
wounded 24 others, police said.
In the same area late Monday, gunmen assaulted a Shiite mosque with mortars
and assault rifles, killing seven people and wounding three.
In northern Mosul, gunmen attacked and killed four unidentified Kurds and
injured another, said Ahmed Abdul-Aziz, a doctor at of Jumhouri Hospital.
A roadside bomb targeting a police patrol exploded in eastern Baghdad's
Zaiyouna neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, wounding three police officers and
a civilian, police said.
Gunmen killed police brigadier Ziad Ramzi in central Mosul city. The officer
was in plain clothes when he was shot, said Nineveh police brigadier Saeid
Ahmeed.
Two armed men were killed and four Iraqi soldiers were injured in a
firefight between Iraqi forces and gunmen in the Qadisiyah area in eastern
Rawah, 175 miles northwest of Baghdad, the Iraqi military said.
The mosque attack occurred Monday at 9 p.m. in the town on Bani Saad just
south of Baqouba, located 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, the press office of
the Diyala provincial police said.
Bani Saad is 12 miles south of Baqouba, and police said the attack began
when six mortar rounds were fired at the Huseiniyat Bani Saad mosque,
followed by an assault. The gunmen then planted explosives around the mosque
and detonated them, damaging the structure, police said. No other details
were available.
The attack occurred in a mixed but volatile region that in recent months has
seen horrific acts of sectarian violence. Jordanian born-terrorist
mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Sunni extremist who long sought to start
a sectarian war in Iraq, was killed just outside Baqouba in an American
airstrike on June 7.
The attacks came a day after at least 26 people died and five bodies turned
up in city streets and rivers.
Meanwhile deputies argued over a federalism bill that Sunni Arabs fear will
split the country into three distinct sectarian and ethnic cantons.
The leader of the largest Sunni Arab group in parliament, Adnan al-Dulaimi,
said Monday that political parties opposed to a federalism bill were trying
to work together to prevent it from being implemented without changes.
One of the amendments Sunnis are seeking would prevent the weakening of
Iraq's central government in favor of powerful autonomous regions. Both the
north and south are rich in oil, and Sunnis fear they will end up squeezed
into Baghdad and Iraq's western provinces, which have no natural resources.
The federalism bill submitted to parliament last week by the largest Shiite
bloc, the United Iraqi Alliance, calls for a three-part federation. It would
create a separate autonomous state in the predominantly Shiite south - much
like the zone run by Kurds in the north.
Sunni Arabs fear this will split Iraq apart and fuel sectarian bloodshed.
Al-Dulaimi's bloc, along with a smaller Sunni Arab group, two Shiite
groupings, and a secular party forced parliament on Sunday to postpone
debate on the bill for the second time.
Al-Dulaimi said parliament should first meet a key Sunni Arab demand to set
up a committee to amend the constitution, approved by referendum last
October, before discussing any other legislation relating to Iraq's new
charter.
Objections from Sunni Arabs and an apparent split among Shiites led leaders
to delay the debate until Sept. 19. A previous attempt to discuss the bill
Thursday set off acrimonious squabbling that led parliament speaker Mahmoud
al-Mashhadani to recess that session.
Although the idea of federalism is enshrined in the new Iraqi constitution,
and there is already an autonomous Kurdish region in the north, special
legislation and a referendum would be needed to turn Iraq into a full
federation.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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