http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061102/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_061102144013
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061102/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_061102144013&printe
r=1> &printer=1

 

Iraq bombs kill 7 after blockade lifted 

By SAMEER N. YACOUB, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 16 minutes ago 

A motorcycle rigged with explosives blew up Thursday in a crowded market in
Baghdad's Shiite Sadr City district, killing at least seven people and
wounding 45, police said.

It was the first bombing in Sadr City since Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
ordered the lifting Tuesday of a weeklong security blockade on the district.

Meanwhile, at least 119 Iraqi policemen were killed in shootings, abductions
and bomb attacks last month, the Interior Ministry said Thursday,
underscoring the toll Iraq's relentless violence is inflicting on the poorly
trained and underequipped force.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said on a trip to France that it would take
his country two or three years to set up its own security forces and send
U.S.-led troops home.

Sadr City is a stronghold of the Mahdi Army militia, which is loyal to
radical anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Police Lt. Thaer Mahmoud said the explosives went off at around 4 p.m. in
the Mereidi market, one of the neighborhood's most popular commercial
centers.

At least seven people were killed and 45 wounded, some seriously, police
Capt. Mohammed Ismail said.

The rigged motorcycle was left in a section of the market that specialized
in the sales of secondhand motorbikes and spare parts.

Associated Press Television News footage showed scores of mangled motorbikes
and large pools of blood on the ground after the blast.

Mahdi Army militiamen arrived at the scene, dispersing a crowd of onlookers
for fear a second blast could target rescuers and police as has often
happened in past bombings.

The U.S. military said, meanwhile, that it had killed a mid-ranking member
of al-Qaida in Iraq and his driver in an air strike in Ramadi. And Iraqi
police said gunmen killed the Shiite dean of Baghdad University's school of
administration and economics along with his wife and son on Thursday, four
days after the murder of a prominent Sunni academic.

"Two to three years are needed to build our security forces and say goodbye
to our friends," Talabani said at a conference in Paris during a six-day
visit that was to include talks with President Jacques Chirac later
Thursday.

An Iraqi Interior Ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because he wasn't authorized to talk to the media, said 185 police were
reported injured in October - pointing to an extremely low survival rate
among members of the force, who lack the armored vehicles, body armor, and
fortified bases of the U.S. troops in the country. In contrast, there is a
much higher proportion of injured to slain American soldiers, with 33,838
wounded and 2,817 killed since the war began.

The Iraqi police death toll for October follows an announcement by the top
U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. George Casey, that more than 300 Iraqi police
and soldiers died during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which began at
the end of September and ended early last week.

Altogether, more than 1,000 Iraqis died from violence in October, the
highest level since The Associated Press began tracking civilian deaths in
April 2005. That count most likely underestimates the true figure because
many deaths go unreported. The United Nations puts the monthly death toll at
more than 3,000.

Scattered bombings and shootings in Baghdad and other parts of Iraq on
Thursday killed at least eight people and injured 42, police said. The
bodies of two men who had been bound and blindfolded before being shot
execution style were found dumped in an eastern suburb of the capital.

In a brief statement, the U.S. military said Rafa al-Ithawi, also known as
Abu Taha, was killed in the city 70 miles west of Baghdad on Wednesday by
laser-guided weapons that destroyed his vehicle.

The U.S. military said al-Ithawi had been named an al-Qaida in Iraq emir,
giving him the rank of local level commander in Anbar province, the heart of
the Sunni insurgency that has stubbornly battled U.S. troops and their Iraqi
allies. 

Al-Qaida in Iraq has sworn affiliation to Osama bin Laden and is blamed for
engineering many of the most brutal incidents of sectarian violence in Iraq.


The military said al-Ithawi frequently provided haven for foreign militants
who come to Iraq to carry out attacks on civilians and U.S. coalition
forces. 

"This and other recent operations in the region highlight the deliberate,
methodical dismantlement of the al-Qaida in Iraq network and those who
contribute to its illegal actions," the statement said. 

The Iraqi government issued a nearly identical statement about the attack,
but gave no additional details. 

The U.S. military killed al-Qaida in Iraq's founder, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
in a similar airstrike in May. 

Iraqi police said economics dean Jassim al-Asadi was driving with his family
in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Azamiyah when unidentified
assailants pulled alongside and opened fire, police Lt. Ahmed Ibrahim said. 

The shooting follows the killing on Monday of geologist Essam al-Rawi, head
of the University Professor's Union and a senior member of the hardline
Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, which is believed to have links to the
anti-Shiite insurgency raging against U.S. forces and their Iraqi allies. 

The murders closely followed the pattern of tit-for-tat sectarian killings
that have raged through much of Iraq following attacks on Shiite holy sites
in February. 

Academics have also increasingly been singled out for attacks due to their
relatively high public stature and vulnerability. Some professors have also
been killed by students angered over poor grades or other grievances, or
because of their past membership in the Baath Party of former dictator
Saddam Hussein. 

The Education Ministry says at least 154 university professors were murdered
in Iraq between April 9, 2003, shortly after the U.S. invasion, and Oct. 3,
2006. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of others have fled to neighboring
countries.



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