Many killed in Baghdad bombings

At least 32 people have been killed and more than 100 injured in a
string of bomb attacks in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, police have
said.

Twelve died in a car-bomb attack in the south of the city, shortly
before the Iftar meal, when Muslims break their fast during the holy
month of Ramadan.

Two further bombings struck the Karrada district later in the evening,
leaving at least 19 people dead and 70 wounded.

Another person died in a car bomb earlier in the day in western
Baghdad.

Last week, the senior US military commander in the capital, Maj-Gen
Jeffery Hammond, said it had so far witnessed the least violent
Ramadan in three years. However, he cautioned that the past few days
had seen a spike in attacks.

Shoppers targeted

The first major bomb, planted inside a minibus, exploded late in the
afternoon in the Shurta neighbourhood of south Baghdad, as people were
out shopping for food for Iftar. At least 12 people were killed and 30
wounded, police said.

At about the same time, another car bomb exploded in the car park of a
market in the nearby Hay al-Amil district, killing one person.

Sometime after the Iftar meal had ended, a third car bomb and a
roadside bomb struck in a busy part of Karrada, where many people were
buying gifts and food ahead of a six-day public holiday beginning on
Tuesday with the feast day of Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of
Ramadan.

"The insurgents... [want] to show there is no security in Baghdad," an
Iraqi government security spokesman, Qassim Moussawi, told the Reuters
news agency, adding that their attacks were hard to stop.

The Iraqi army says violence in the capital has spiked in the past two
weeks.

There have been several car bombs in the city centre and violent
attacks elsewhere in the country too, the BBC's Hugh Sykes says.

At least eight children have been killed, and 35 members of a joint
police-Sunni Arab Awakening movement patrol died last week when they
were shot in an ambush in a village near Baquba, in Diyala Province,
known to be a stronghold of al-Qaeda in Iraq.

End of article.

I know they are only Iraqi lives so they don't count, but the US can
hardly claim that less attacks on US forces mean that Iraq is
returning to some sort of normality. IT IS NOT.


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