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Gold9472
04-24-2005, 03:03 PM
Baghdad blasts kill at least 15 near mosque
Earlier, twin suicide bombs strike Tikrit

Sunday, April 24, 2005 Posted: 1:48 PM EDT (1748 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Two explosions rocked western Baghdad's al-Shu'lah neighborhood near a Shiite Muslim mosque on Sunday, killing at least 15 people and wounding at least 57, Iraqi police said.

The first blast was triggered near the mosque -- and when people gathered near the scene, a suicide car bomber drove into the crowd and detonated the vehicle in the second blast, police said.

Word of the blasts in the capital came just hours after news of two suicide car bombs in Tikrit, about 90 miles (150 km) north of Baghdad.

The bombs exploded just 15 minutes and a short distance apart, killing at least six people and wounding 26 at an Iraqi Police Academy in Tikrit, according to an official with Tikrit's governor's office.

Police were responding to the first explosion -- which happened in front of the police academy at 8 a.m. (12 a.m. EDT) -- when the second car bomb detonated close by at the meteorology building, the official said.

In an earlier attack Saturday evening, seven commandos with Iraq's Interior Ministry were wounded when five mortar rounds landed inside their facility in the al-Baiya' neighborhood of southwest Baghdad, Iraq police said.

The attack in Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown, occurred as new recruits at the academy were about to travel to the Jordanian capital of Amman for a training program, police Lt. Shalan Allawi said, The Associated Press reported.

A doctor at Tikrit General Hospital said the bombs killed four policemen and two civilians, with 23 policemen and several civilians wounded, AP reported.

Elsewhere, three insurgents were killed Sunday as the roadside bomb they were trying to plant in the town of Mahawil exploded, police said in the nearby city of Hillah.

The explosions follow the deaths of at least 12 people Saturday in a series of attacks by insurgents.

The U.S. military said Task Force Baghdad soldiers arrested eight people Saturday. They are suspected of shooting down a commercial helicopter Thursday.

The military said in a release that an "Iraqi civilian helped Task Force Baghdad soldiers find" eight people, who were being questioned in the crash that resulted in the deaths of 11 people on board.

Six American security contractors, two Bulgarian crew members and two Fijian security guards were killed in the crash.

A Bulgarian crew member who survived the crash was shot to death, according to the Bulgarian company that owned the helicopter.

The helicopter was flying from Baghdad to the northern city of Tikrit when it went down just north of the capital.

A news release from Task Force Baghdad said an "Iraqi citizen told the soldiers he knew where the blue Kia pickup truck the terrorists used during the attack was parked and led them to the site.

"When the soldiers got there, several other local residents confirmed the first tip and showed the soldiers where the terrorists lived."

Soldiers searched two houses at 12:30 a.m. The military said troops captured three men and bomb-making materials at one house, and three more men suspected of making bombs at a second home -- but it did not specify where the houses were.

The Americans who were killed in the crash worked for North Carolina-based Blackwater Security Consulting USA. Friday, the company released the names of the employees who died.

They are: Robert Jason Gore, 23, of Nevada, Iowa; Luke Adam Petrik, 24, of Conneaut, Ohio; Jason Obert, 29, of Fountain, Colorado; Steve McGovern, 24, of Lexington, Kentucky; Eric Smith, 31, of Waukesha, Wisconsin; and David Patterson, 27, of Havelock, North Carolina.

Violence intensifies

Insurgents kept up attacks on security forces Saturday and Sunday.

The weekend attacks are the latest in an apparent surge of rebel violence following a slight decline in February and March. As the attacks continue, Iraqi officials are struggling to put together a new government chosen in the January 30 elections for a 275-member transitional national assembly.

This week, more than 50 people have been killed and more than 100 others wounded in the most notorious attacks. Insurgents primarily have targeted military and police officers, but have also gone after government officials and contractors.

CNN military analyst and retired Brig. Gen. David Grange said Thursday that he expects more spikes in violence.

"I think the recent violence is typical," he said. "And there will be continual spikes throughout the next several years as this transition to Iraqi security forces and this Iraqi governance takes place.

"A lot of Iraqi civilians are reporting the whereabouts and the networking of these insurgent forces. So the spikes come from where they are capable of striking, which is not everywhere."

Nine killed in bombing

In the deadliest attack Saturday, a roadside bomb near Abu Ghraib prison killed at least nine Iraqi soldiers and wounded 20 others, emergency police said.

The blast struck an Iraqi army convoy as it passed Zaydan village on the western outskirts of Baghdad.

The road that leads to Baghdad International Airport is particularly dangerous. On Saturday, a roadside bomb targeted a U.S. military convoy there, killing a civilian and wounding eight others, including three U.S. soldiers, Iraqi police and the U.S. military said.

Insurgents have also attacked other convoys on the road. Earlier in the week three contractors for a British security firm were killed by small arms fire, their employer said, and one other military convoy attack left two civilians dead and five others wounded.

A roadside bomb killed a U.S. soldier traveling in a convoy near Haswa, west of Baghdad, on Saturday. Since the start of the war, 1,568 U.S. service members have died in Iraq.

Also Saturday, an Iraqi contractor for the U.S. military was shot to death while driving a truck through Jami'a neighborhood in western Baghdad, Iraqi police said.

In southern Iraq, a car bomb exploded Saturday morning near a school in the town of Abu al-Kahsib, near Basra, according to Iraqi police Capt. Karim al-Zoubaidi. Two Iraqi civilians were wounded, police said.

Other developments

An Associated Press Television News cameraman was killed and an AP photographer was wounded Saturday in the northern city of Mosul, officials said. Saleh Ibrahim and Mohammed Ibrahim -- who were not related, the news agency said -- were shot in a crossfire between U.S. forces and insurgents, said an official at the hospital where Saleh Ibrahim died.
The U.S. Army has cleared Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez -- the former commander of U.S. forces in Iraq -- of any wrongdoing in the abuse of inmates at the Abu Ghraib prison, senior Pentagon officials said Friday. The officials said the Army's inspector general, Lt. Gen. Stanley Green, looked into accusations of leadership failure against Sanchez and found them to be unsubstantiated. Sanchez will not be punished, the officials said. (Full story)
In northern Iraq, insurgents shot and killed a top official in Nineveh province on Friday, the U.S. military said. Col. Khalid Najim Abdallah, director of corrections, was the fifth official in the province to be assassinated in the past four weeks.

A U.S. Marine died Thursday in a noncombat incident at Camp Delta, just northwest of Baghdad.

A 12-year-old Iraqi boy awaited word on the schedule for his surgery, complicated by the death of an American activist who was helping him. (Full story)

CNN's Enes Dulami, Ayman Mohyeldin, Kianne Sadeq and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.

danceyogamom
04-24-2005, 05:14 PM
There are so many reports of bombings, I almost feel numb to the entire issue.

That is far too horrible of me.

Simply_sexy
04-24-2005, 09:49 PM
It makes me want to throw up...