Thursday, August 23, 2007

Baghdad, Iraq: Car bomb explosion kills 5


Residents check the wreckage of a vehicle used in a car bomb attack in Baghdad's Sadr City August 20, 2007. At least five people were killed and 20 wounded when a parked car bomb exploded in the Shi'ite Sadr City district of northeastern Baghdad, police said. REUTERS/Kareem Raheem (IRAQ)


Baghdad car bomb kills five people – police

REUTERS
5:42 a.m. August 20, 2007

BAGHDAD – At least five people were killed when a bomb in a parked car exploded in the Shi'ite Sadr City district of in northeastern Baghdad on Monday, police said.
Another 20 were wounded in the blast.
Sadr city is a sprawling Shi'ite slum and stronghold of the feared Mehdi Army militia loyal to anti-American cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
The U.S. military last week announced a major new offensive targeting Sunni Islamist al Qaeda and Shi'ite militias in the run-up to a crucial progress report on Iraq to be delivered to Congress in mid-September.
Washington fears al Qaeda and Shi'ite militias will attempt to influence debate on the unpopular war in Washington by stepping up attacks before the report is delivered.
Tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed in waves of sectarian violence since the bombing of a revered Shi'ite shrine in the town of Samarra in February 2006 pushed Iraq to the brink of all-out civil war.
Find this article at:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/iraq/20070820-0542-iraq-bombing.html




Firemen respond to the site of a car bomb attack in the Shiite district of Sadr City, in east Baghdad, Iraq on Monday, Aug. 20, 2007, where the blast killed at least three people and wounded six. (AP Photo/ Karim Kadim)

Car bomb explosion kills four people in Baghdad's Shiite bastion

A car bomb went off in Baghdad's eastern Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City on Monday, killing at least four people and wounding five others, an Interior Ministry source said.
"A car bomb detonated in the afternoon in the al-Sadrain Square in Sadr City neighborhood, killing four people and wounding five others," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
"We can not immediately say whether the attack was committed by a suicide bomber or it was a parking booby-trapped car," the source said, adding the incident is under investigation.
Earlier, a motorcycle bomb explosion ripped through a commercial area near the al-Rusafi Square in downtown, killing at least a civilian and injuring 12 others, also a ministry source said.
The explosion damaged several nearby shops and buildings in the crowded area near the main wholesale market of Shorja in central Baghdad, the source said.
Violence persists in Baghdad as sectarian killings, bombings, and abductions kill dozens daily.
Source: Xinhua

Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

Baghdad, Iraq: Civilian killed in motorcycle bomb

Civilian killed in motorcycle bomb in central Baghdad

A motorcycle bomb ripped through a commercial area in downtown Baghdad on Monday, killing at least a civilian and injuring 12 others, an Interior Ministry source said.
"A motorcycle rigged with explosives detonated before noon near the al-Rusafi Square, killing a civilian and wounding 12 others," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
The explosion damaged several nearby shops and buildings in the crowded area near the main wholesale market of Shorja in central Baghdad, the source said.
The toll could rise, he said, as sirens of police vehicles and ambulances are wailing at the scene to secure the area and they will ferry more casualties to nearby hospitals.
On Thursday, the same commercial area was hit by a car bomb, killing four people and wounding six others.
Violence persists in Baghdad as sectarian killings, bombings, and abductions inflict dozens of casualties daily.
Source: Xinhua

Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved

Acre, Israel: Car bomb explodes in assassination attempt

Car bomb explodes in Acre assassination attempt
By JPOST.COM STAFF

A car bomb exploded in Acre on Monday morning moderately wounding one person, who police claim is familiar to them.
Police, sappers and firefighters reached the scene shortly after an explosion was heard from a private vehicle.
Police suspected that the incident was an assassination attempt of a local criminal.
The wounded man was evacuated to a hospital and four other people suffered from shock.


Car bomb in Acre leaves two wounded
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST Aug. 20, 2007
A car bomb exploded on a central Acre street on Monday morning wounding two people in an apparent assassination attempt on a local criminal.
One man, who was known to the police, was moderately wounded, another was lightly wounded and four others were reported to be suffering from shock.
Police, sappers and firefighters reached the scene shortly after an explosion was heard from a private vehicle. A Magen David Adom ambulance evacuated the wounded to Nahariya Hospital.
According to police, had the incident taken place 10 meters from where the bomb exploded, there could have been fatalities. Witnesses said that a man escaped from the car several seconds before the explosion and immediately fled the scene.
In May, a similar assassination attempt between rival gang members in Ramat Gan almost succeeded after a shoot-out in broad daylight left a police officer wounded and an assailant dead when members of the Lod-based Aberjil crime family tried to kill Nissim Alperon, brother of Ya'acov Alperon.
This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com /servlet/Satellite?cid=1187502423084&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Baghdad, Iraq: US troops find car bombs


Paratroopers with Company C, 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, detain two suspected terrorists Aug. 11, 2007, during a raid in Samarra, Iraq. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Joshua R. Ford (released)


Odierno Highlights Iraqi Operations

Iraqi and Coalition forces are pursuing extremist leaders in Iraq's remote areas in coordinated "quick strikes" launched this week, the commander of Multi-National Corps-Iraq told Pentagon reporters Saturday.
Operation Phantom Strike is a series of joint operations that extend from Operation Phantom Thunder, a corps-level offensive that began in June targeting al-Qaeda, Sunni insurgents and Shiia extremists in, near and around Baghdad, said U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno.
"With the elimination of safe havens and support zones due to Phantom Thunder, al-Qaeda and Shiite extremists have been forced into ever-shrinking areas. It is my intent to pursue and disrupt their operations," Odierno said.
Over the coming weeks, the general said, combined forces will conduct quick-strike raids against extremist sanctuaries and staging areas. Using precision-targeting operations, troops will target terrorist leaders and members of lethal improvised-explosive-device and car-bomb networks, he said.
"We will continue to hunt down the leadership, deny them safe haven, disrupt their supply lines and significantly reduce their capability to operate in Iraq," Odierno added.
In the first 24 hours of one "quick-strike" raid, Multi-National Division-North Soldiers captured and killed several enemies and seized weapons caches in the Diyala River Valley. Called Operation Lightning Hammer, this operation targeted extremists as they tried to re-establish sanctuaries, the general said.
Odierno highlighted some successes of Operation Phantom Thunder, which launched June 15. In 142 battalion-level joint operations, Iraqi and Coalition forces detained 6,702 suspects, killed 1,196 enemies and wounded 419 others. Combined forces also killed or captured 382 high-value targets, he said.
Troops also cleared 1,113 weapons caches and scores of IEDs and car bombs. "The number of found and cleared IEDs, (car bombs) and caches are approximately 50 percent higher than the same period last year due, in large part, to effective tips provided by concerned Iraqi citizens," the general added.
Odierno warned that high-profile attacks may rise as two important dates approach. In the early weeks of September, Ramadan, Islam's holiest month, begins. U.S. Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of Multi-National Force-Iraq, is slated to present an anticipated report to Congress around the same time.
"Our enemy is ruthless and will no doubt attempt to exploit the upcoming Ramadan season, as well as influence political opinions in the coming weeks by increasing attacks with particular emphasis on high-profile terror attacks," he said.
But extremists' efforts are increasingly hampered by civilians who cooperate with coalition forces as troops ramp-up raids around the country, Odierno said.
"Al-Qaeda and other extremist elements will have to contend with an Iraqi population that no longer welcomes them," he said, "as well as quick-hitting offensive operations by Coalition and Iraqi forces."
Source: Multi-National Force-Iraq
judythpiazza@newsblaze.com
Copyright © 2007, NewsBlaze, Daily News




Clearing operations in Samarra strike hard at insurgency
By Sgt. Joshua R. Ford, Public Affairs Office, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division
Aug 18, 2007 - 4:35:25 PM

Paratroopers with Company C, 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division, detain two suspected terrorists Aug. 11, 2007, during a raid in Samarra, Iraq. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Joshua R. Ford (released)
Blackanthem Military News, SAMARRA, Iraq - Paratroopers from Company C, 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, have been patrolling and operating in Samarra, Iraq, for more than one year and recently supported the Iraqi security forces in a clearing operation to rid the city of the al Qaeda presence terrorizing Samarra and its citizens.
The operation was dubbed "Operation Jalil" in honor of Col. Jalil Nahi Hasoun, Samarra's former police chief, who was killed May 6, 2007, during a suicide car bomb attack.
The operation led Maj. Gen. Rashid al-Helfy, commander of Iraqi security forces in Samarra, his men, and Paratroopers of Company C to the discovery of weapons caches, bomb making materials and the detainment of more than 80 suspected terrorists, including suspects responsible for the June 13, 2007, bombing of the Askirya Mosque.
The Askirya Mosque, also known as the Golden Dome Shrine, was first bombed Feb. 22, 2006, and sparked a wave of sectarian violence throughout the country. The explosion collapsed the dome.
The June 13 bombing destroyed the two remaining minarets flanking the golden dome of the mosque.
Since then, more than 2,500 Iraqi soldiers from the 4th Iraqi army, and policemen from the 6th National Police Division, have been deployed to the city to create a stable security situation. Including Operation Jalil, Company C has also detained more than 200 insurgents since the second mosque attack.
When the Iraqi national police first arrived in Samarra, they received anything but a warm welcome. The people of Samarra were very hesitant to receive the policemen, said Capt. Buddy Ferris, commander, Company C.
Now the citizens of Samarra are very receptive to the national police, and the Paratroopers from Company C have seen this through the vast amount of information they receive everyday from the people in Samarra about terrorists operating in their neighborhoods, Ferris added.
"(The Paratroopers) like to see that the Iraqis are taking the lead," said Ferris. "We will continue to push forward the Iraqi security forces so they can provide a stable enough environment so we can start developing a legitimate government that functions and is tied in with the (Salah ad Din) province."
The 150-Paratrooper force are responsible for securing a city of more than 150,000. Two years ago the U.S. Army needed a whole brigade of more than 3,000 Soldiers to secure the city.
Since the Paratroopers of Company C have been in Samarra, they have killed more than 50 terrorists and detained more than 300.
The Paratroopers of Company C have done an outstanding job in Samarra since they arrived in August 2006. They always have a good attitude in wanting to help the citizens in the city, said Sgt. Tim Curry, team leader, Company C.
"(The Paratroopers) have been holding the lid on the city of Samarra for a year. This company has been able to hold Samarra in one piece, so to say, and has actually been able to make progress and it speaks volumes," said Ferris. "(The Paratroopers) are tired; we are at month 13, but we know we're making a difference."

Kandahar, Afghanistan: Car bomber kills 15 wounds 5


Afghan policemen stand next to the wreckage of a car used in a suicide bomb attack in Kandahar, August 18, 2007. A suicide car bomb attack outside a base of a U.S.security firm on Saturday killed 15 people in Afghanistan's southern province of Kandahar, witnesses and police said. REUTERS/Ismail Sameem (AFGHANISTAN)



Suicide raid on U.S. security firm kills 15 Afghans
Sat Aug 18, 2007 12:26PM IST
Mirwais Afghan
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (Reuters) - A suicide car bomb attack outside a base of a U.S. security firm on Saturday killed 15 people in Afghanistan's southern province of Kandahar, witnesses and police said.
Violence has surged in the past 19 months in Afghanistan, the bloodiest period since U.S.-led troops overthrew the Taliban's government in 2001.
The blast happened close to a highway on the western outskirts of Kandahar city, they said. Police said it was a suicide car bomber. Witnesses said it was aimed at a U.S. security firm called USPI.
A police vehicle and a passenger car were also hit by the explosion, witnesses said, adding three police were amongst the victims.
"We saw 12 dead bodies being dragged away. They were civilians and also Afghan employees of the company," said one witness who refused to give his name.
Kandahar's police chief, Sayed Agha Saqib, said 15 people had been killed in the attack.
A Reuters reporter saw 15 bodies in the morgue of a hospital in Kandahar city. They included five police, three women and a child, he said, adding 18 more people were wounded in the blast.
The attack came a day after a suicide bomber inside the city killed a district chief and three of his children at the gate of their home. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Saturday's attack.
The Taliban movement has claimed many previous suicide attacks.
The group largely relies on suicide raids and roadside bombs as part of its campaign against the Afghan government and Western troops based in the country.
Some 7,000 people have been killed in the past 19 months in Afghanistan by violence which is rising despite the presence of some 50,000 Western troops led by NATO and the U.S.-led coalition as well as more than 100,000 Afghan forces.
The violence has hit hardest in southern and eastern areas, where the Taliban and their allies such as al Qaeda are most active.
It has hampered reconstruction projects in the war-torn country and forced dozens of aid groups to halt their activities.
© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.


Car Bomb Kills 9 in Afghanistan
Saturday August 18, 2007 6:46 AM
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan (AP) - A suicide car bomber detonated himself near a convoy of private security forces Saturday in southern Afghanistan, killing three security guards and six civilians who were in a vehicle nearby, police said.
The bomb went off west of Kandahar city and wounded five other guards, as well as five civilians, said Mohammad Jan, a police officer at the scene. Several women and children were among the civilians killed and wounded.
Violence in Afghanistan has risen sharply during the last two months and has killed more than 3,700 people this year, most of them militants, according to an Associated Press tally of casualty figures provided by Western and Afghan officials.



Soldiers hurt in car bomb attack
Published: Saturday, 18 August, 2007, 07:07 AM Doha Time
PESHAWAR: A suicide bomber rammed his explosive-laden car into a Pakistani security force convoy yesterday in the troubled northwest, killing himself and injuring five soldiers, police said.
The attack happened in the Tank district bordering South Waziristan, where tens of thousands of Pakistani troops are deployed to hunt down Taliban and Al Qaeda militants sheltering in the rugged region.
“The bomber slammed his car into the convoy, leaving five soldiers injured,” senior Tank police officer Amir Abdullah said.
Three vehicles were carrying the soldiers from Tank to Jandola town when the bomber chased them in a car before it exploded, he said.
Earlier, Pakistani forces killed four suspected militants in a firefight after a rocket attack on their positions overnight in South Waziristan, local security officials said.
Clashes between security forces and militants have been reported daily from the lawless region since the breakdown in July of a peace deal the authorities signed with pro-Taliban groups in September last year.
Pakistan’s army said yesterday that 15 militants were killed and a dozen others injured in clashes on Thursday which erupted after militants tried to ambush a security forces convoy on the Jandola road.
“We had initially received reports about killing of 10 militants but a later report put the number of fatalities among militants at 15,” chief military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad said.
He said that three soldiers were killed in the attack while four more succumbed to their injuries later, raising the number of deaths to seven.
Separately, two suspected militants were killed when they failed to stop their vehicle at a check post near Mirali town in North Waziristan, security officials said.
When asked about nationalities of the two militants killed, the spokesman said they had been identified as Uzbek and Arab.
The two other militants in the group were arrested.
The Waziristan region in Pakistan’s tribal belt has been the scene recently of escalated military operations against suspected cells of the Taliban and Al Qaeda believed to be planning attacks from there within Pakistan, over the border in Afghanistan and elsewhere in the world. – AFP
Gulf Times Newspaper, 2007



Car Bomb Kills 15 in Afghanistan

The Associated Press
Saturday, August 18, 2007; 2:18 AM
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan -- A suicide car bomber detonated near a convoy of private security forces Saturday in southern Afghanistan, killing four Afghan guards and 11 civilians, including three women and two children, police said.
The bomb went off west of Kandahar city and also wounded six other guards as well as 20 civilians who were in two minivans passing by the convoy, said Kandahar provincial police chief Syed Agha Saqib.
Saqib said the guards worked for the U.S. Protection and Investigations security firm, but USPI could not immediately be reached for comment or to confirm that their employees were attacked.
Five women and three children were among the civilians wounded. Women's and children's shoes were scattered about the area. A stuffed animal toy was left in one of the destroyed minivans.
Violence in Afghanistan has risen sharply during the last two months. More than 3,700 people have died so far this year, most of them militants, according to an Associated Press tally of casualty figures provided by Western and Afghan officials.
© 2007 The Associated Press



Car bomb strikes Kandahar convoy
mwcnews.com
By Agencies
Suicide attacks are increasing in Afghanistan [AFP]
Suicide attacks are increasing in Afghanistan [AFP]
At least 15 people in a convoy guarded by a private US security firm have been killed by a car bomb in southern Afghanistan.
As many as 26 people were also wounded in the suicide attack on Saturday, the blast being so strong it tore through several vehicles.
Police say that the attack was carried out in a crowded area west of Kandahar.
Sayed Aqa, a police chief, said: "Fifteen people, four Afghan security guards and 11 civilians, were killed and another 26 including 19 civilians and seven guards were wounded in the suicide blast today."
The convoy, which was guarded by USPI, was travelling to the Zahri district in Helmand province.
The blast destroyed two vehicles belonging to the guards and a civilian minibus.
Jan Mohammad, a police officer, said: "The bomb was so strong that it ripped through the civilian minibus and several other vehicles."
Carnage
Body parts and pieces of metal from the bomber's car were scattered about 100m from the site. The outer wall of a nearby mosque were also partially destroyed.
One witness, who refused to give his name, said: "We saw 12 dead bodies being dragged away. They were civilians and also Afghan employees of the company."
The attack came a day after a bomber killed a district chief and three of his children at the gate of their home.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for this attack, but the Taliban has claimed responsibility for many blasts in the region.
The group mainly relies on suicide attacks and roadside bombs in its campaign against the US-backed Afghan government and Western troops based in the country.
At least 7,000 people have been killed in the past 19 months despite the presence of 50,000 soldiers led by Nato and the US-led coalition, as well as more than 100,000 Afghan forces.
Attacks occur most in southern and eastern areas, where the Taliban and al-Qaeda are most active.
It has hampered reconstruction projects and has forced dozens of aid groups to end their activities.



German woman kidnapped in Kabul, officials say; Taliban says SKorean hostage talks have failed
The Associated Press
Saturday, August 18, 2007
KABUL, Afghanistan: An armed man walked into a fast food restaurant in the Afghan capital and abducted a German woman at midday Saturday, officials said, as a Taliban spokesman said talks to free 19 South Korean hostages have failed.
Meanwhile, a suicide car bomb attack killed 15 people and wounded 26 others, including several women and children, in Afghanistan's southern city of Kandahar.
The abduction of the German woman, who works for a Christian aid organization, prompted police in Kabul to shoot at a speeding getaway car, killing a nearby taxi driver.
The assailants had pulled up to a barbecue and fast food restaurant in a dark gray Toyota Corolla, and one of the men went inside and asked to order a pizza, said intelligence officials investigating the incident.
They said two other men waited outside, while another remained in the car.
The man in the restaurant pulled out a pistol, walked up to a table where the woman was sitting with her husband, and took her from the restaurant, the officials said on condition of anonymity because of agency policy.
Ahmad Fahim, who works in a nearby bakery, said that the driver had his face covered, and that the man who had been with the woman called for help as she was taken away.
"The man was shouting 'Police! Police!'" and was frantically making calls on his mobile phone, Fahim said.
Police spotted the speeding car and opened fire but missed, hitting a nearby taxi and killing its driver.
Germany's Foreign Ministry confirmed the kidnapping and said they were working with Afghan officials toward a resolution.
"Today a German citizen was abducted in Kabul. We must assume it was a kidnapping," said Julia Gross, a spokeswoman for the ministry in Berlin.
"The Foreign Ministry's crisis team is engaged and working toward a solution in close cooperation with Afghan officials," Gross said.
The 31-year-old woman and her husband, also a German, have worked for the Christian organization Ora International in Kabul since September 2006, said Ulf Baumann, a spokesman for the organization.
Baumann did not disclose the woman's name or her husband's. He said she was fluent in the Afghan language Dari.
Ora International, based in the central German town of Korbach, concentrates its efforts in Afghanistan on health issues and HIV/AIDS awareness, according to its Web site.
U.N. staff in Kabul were told to remain in their locations Saturday afternoon as authorities investigated the abduction, a U.N. official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak on security matters.
Other foreigners were also placed under tight security.
The latest incident comes amid heightened fears of abductions, after 23 South Koreans and two Germans were taken hostage in separate incidents last month in central Afghanistan.
One of the German men has been shot to death. The other remains in captivity.
Taliban militants killed two of the South Koreans and released two others after face-to-face talks with South Korean officials.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi said the group's demands for the release of the remaining 19 South Koreans remains the same — a swap for Taliban prisoners, which the Afghan government has ruled out.
"The negotiations failed because we have presented them (the South Korean delegates) with our list of 23 people we want to be released, but the Korean delegation ... said, 'We cannot fulfill your demands,'" Ahmadi said by telephone from an undisclosed location.
"We're still ready for more negotiations if the Korean side is willing to meet our demands ... the exchange of prisoners," he said.
The Afghan and Italian governments were heavily criticized after swapping five Taliban prisoners for the release of an Italian journalist in March. The Afghan government, worried that hostage-taking will become an industry, said the prisoner swap was a one-time deal.
Separately on Saturday, a suicide bomber detonated near a convoy of private security forces west of Kandahar, killing 15 people including three women and two children, police said.
Four security guards were among the dead, while the attack wounded six guards and 20 civilians who were riding in two minivans also hit by the blast, said Kandahar provincial police chief Syed Agha Saqib.
Saqib said the Afghan guards worked for a U.S. security firm called U.S. Protection and Investigations.
Violence in Afghanistan has risen sharply during the last two months. This year more than 3,700 people — most of them militants — have died, according to an Associated Press tally of casualty figures provided by Western and Afghan officials.
____
Associated Press Writers Noor Khan in Kandahar and Froben Homburger in Frankfurt, Germany, contributed to this report.



15 killed in Kandahar suicide attack
dawn.com

KANDAHAR, Aug 18: A suicide car bomb attack outside a base of a US security firm here on Saturday killed 15 people. The blast occurred close to a highway on the outskirts of the city, police said. Witnesses said it was aimed at United States security firm USPI.
A police vehicle and a car were also hit by the explosion, witnesses said.
�We saw 12 bodies being dragged away. They were civilians and also Afghan employees of the company,� said a witness.
A Reuters reporter saw 15 bodies in the morgue of a hospital, five of them of policemen, three women and a child. He said 18 other people were wounded.
MULLA OMAR: Taliban leader Mulla Mohammad Omar, meanwhile, called upon the Afghans to unite with the militants to drive western forces from Afghanistan.
A message marking the 88th anniversary on Sunday of Afghanistan�s independence from Britain, signed by the Taliban chief and emailed to news agencies, called on Afghans to set aside their differences and wage jihad against colonialist forces.
�The enemies of the religion of Islam and the independence of the country have launched satanic propaganda under the slogans of democracy and freedom and are trying to disperse Afghans and benefit from it,� it said.
�We must wake up and be careful. We have to put aside all of our internal, regional and linguistic differences and unite against the enemy.�
The message said the regrouped militants were winning their war against the more than 50,000 coalition forces.�Reuters/AFP



Afghan bystanders and police personeel look at the wreckage of a damaged car near the site of a suicide bomb attack in Kandahar August 18, 2007. A suicide car bomb attack outside a base of a U.S.security firm on Saturday killed 15 people in Afghanistan's southern province of Kandahar, witnesses and police said. REUTERS/Ismail Sameem

Suicide car bomb attack kills 13 Afghan civilians, 2 guards
By David Rohdeand Taimoor Shah
New York Times
San Jose Mercury News
Article Launched:08/19/2007 01:50:42 AM PDT

KABUL, Afghanistan - A suicide car bomb attack killed 13 civilians and two Afghan security guards on the outskirts of Kandahar on Saturday morning, Afghan officials said. The attack was one of the deadliest in southern Afghanistan this year, and two women and a child were among the dead.
In Kabul, armed men walked into a restaurant in an affluent neighborhood on Saturday afternoon and kidnapped a woman who was a German aid worker, Afghan and Western officials said. The woman, who works for a group that helps Afghan orphans, is the latest of several foreigners who have been kidnapped in Afghanistan.
The suicide bombing on Saturday occurred around 9 a.m. when a man rammed a bomb-laden car into a convoy of vehicles driven by Afghan employees of U.S. Protection & Investigations, a private American security company that guards foreign contractors.
The explosion destroyed a security company vehicle and killed two security guards, according to the police, but the bulk of its impact was on a van carrying civilians.
"The van passing nearby the incident was completely destroyed, along with the passengers," Muhammad Nader, a driver who had seen the attack, said in a telephone interview. "I saw pieces of human bodies scattered around."
Sayed Agha Saqib, the Kandahar province police chief, said 20 people had been wounded in the car bomb attack and taken to hospitals for treatment.
In the kidnapping in Kabul, two armed men walked into the restaurant in the Karta Chahar neighborhood as the German woman and her husband were eating at 1:30 p.m., said a Western official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the kidnapping. The Taliban has carried out a rash of abductions in Afghanistan in recent weeks. But in a telephone interview, a spokesman for the Taliban, Zabiullah Mujahed, said he did not know whether the Taliban was involved on Saturday.
At the same time, there has been a rise in kidnappings, killings and robberies by criminal gangs in Kabul. On Wednesday, a British national was shot dead in Kabul in an apparent robbery.
"From our perspective, it's not looking like it's political," said the Western official, referring to the German woman's kidnapping. "This is looking like a criminal abduction."
The Taliban is holding hostage 19 Korean Christian aid workers, who were abducted as they rode on a public bus driving from Kabul to Kandahar. The Taliban have killed two male hostages and released two women.
In that case, a Taliban spokesman, Qari Yousef Ahmadi, said in a telephone interview that negotiations between the Taliban and Korean officials had broken down.




Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan
First Van Doo to die in mission

Andrew Mayeda
CanWest News Service

Sunday, August 19, 2007


Pte Simon Longtin was killed on 19 August, 2007 after the vehicle he was traveling in, a LAV III, struck an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).
CREDIT: DND


KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - Quebec's storied Van Doos regiment is mourning its first loss in Afghanistan after a young private who arrived in the country only three weeks ago was killed by a roadside bomb.

Pte. Simon Longtin, 23, was travelling in a LAV-III armoured vehicle when it struck an improvised explosive device.
Canadian soldiers exchanged fire with Taliban insurgents after the blast, but no other Canadian soldiers were injured and no Taliban casualties could be confirmed.
Longtin was evacuated by helicopter to a hospital at Kandahar Airfield, but was pronounced dead upon arrival.
He is the first member of the Van Doos to be killed while serving in Afghanistan. The Royal 22nd Regiment, as it is officially known, took command of Canada's operations in Afghanistan on Aug. 1.
"It's like losing almost a brother. We're like a big family here," said Col. Christian Juneau, Canada's deputy commander in Afghanistan. "We will mourn, we will pay our respects to the family and our fallen comrade, and we will carry on with the mission."
Longtin, who hails from Longueuil, Que., was an infantry rifleman with Charlie Company, which forms part of Canada's battle group.
He had trained for two years with the company before arriving in Afghanistan about three weeks ago.
He lived with other members of the company at Masum Ghar, a forward operating base located at the border of the volatile Zhari and Panjwaii districts.
Lieut.-Col. Alain Gauthier, commander of the Canadian battle group, called Longtin a "keen," "professional" soldier.
Sunday, Maj. Kasey McLean, speaking the base in Valcartier, Que., said Longtin's family said it was proud he served.
McLean, a Van Doo commander, said the family told him Longtin would "often express his pride and belief in what he did."
He said the family wished to mourn in private and would issue a statement later.
Political observers, meanwhile, will be watching closely to see how the news reverberates in Quebec, where support for the war is the lowest of any province.
According to some polls, seven in 10 Quebecers oppose the mission.
The attack occurred at about 1:41 a.m. along Foster Road, roughly 20 kilometres west of Kandahar City.
The vehicle was part of a supply convoy headed west toward Masum Ghar.
It is the second time in a week that Canadian soldiers have been wounded or killed along Foster Road, a well-travelled supply route. Five soldiers were lightly injured last Sunday by an IED along the same road. After that attack, the military dispatched engineers to scour the route for IEDs.
The engineers checked for bombs in drainage culverts where insurgents are believed to have planted the bomb used in last Sunday's attack. At one point, engineers discovered a Chinese-made mortar in one of the culverts. They detonated the bomb safely, setting off a thud that echoed through the nearby mountains.
Juneau said Canadian troops will step up surveillance of the route. "However, with the size of our operation, it's quite difficult to have eyes everywhere ... You travel on the road, (and) the next night they can insert themselves and install an IED."
Military officials declined to provide details on the nature of the bomb, saying the incident was under investigation. They also would not say where Longtin was sitting in the LAV-III, which is designed to protect against roadside bombs.
The death of the first Van Doos caps a bloody week in Kandahar province.
Two soldiers incurred minor injuries Friday after their armoured vehicle rolled over an IED while traveling in a supply convoy about 30 kilometres west of Kandahar City. A suicide bomber also killed the chief of Zhari district and three of his children. On Saturday, a suicide car bomber rammed into a convoy of vehicles, killing at least 15 people and injuring dozens of others on the edge of Kandahar City.
Some observers believe the insurgents could step up their attacks when the Muslim holy period of Ramadan begins in a few weeks.
On Saturday, the Taliban released a statement purported to be from their reclusive leader, Mullah Omar. It called on Afghans to wage a jihad against the foreign "invaders." The statement came on the eve of Independence Day, which commemorates Afghanistan's declaration of independence from Britain in 1919.
"Our country is once again occupied by the same forces," Omar said in his statement, which has not yet been verified.
Juneau brushed off the Taliban warning, reiterating the Canadian position that the insurgents are "on their heels."
He admitted there has been "a lot of activity" by insurgents recently, but he said the attacks were not well co-ordinated.
Violence in Kandahar province has surged in recent months, with the rate of roadside bombings and other terrorist attacks reaching its worst level since the war began in 2001.
Sixty-seven Canadian soldiers and one diplomat have now died in Afghanistan since 2002. There are roughly 2,500 Canadian troops stationed in Afghanistan as part of the NATO-led coalition that is attempting to secure and rebuild the country.
Canada's military commitment ends in February 2009. Prime Minister Harper has said he will seek a consensus from Parliament before extending the mission.
Juneau said the debate about whether to extend the mission should be left to politicians and the Canadian public.
"The important thing for us, the soldiers, the whole team that is deployed here, is the fact that we know the Canadian public is behind the soldiers, the people wearing the uniform."
On Sunday, Prime Minister Stephen Harper issued a statement on the latest death.
"It is with deep sorrow that I extend my condolences, on behalf of all Canadians, to the family and friends of Private Simon Longtin, who was killed in Afghanistan."
"Private Longtin displayed resolve and courage in serving his country, his family and friends can be proud of him because he was playing a very important role in a very challenging environment. He will be sorely missed by the Canadian Forces family."
"In marking the 65th anniversary of the Dieppe Raid, we pay tribute to the soldiers of our past. The sacrifices of soldiers like Private Longtin carry on this legacy today, helping to bring stability and peace to parts of the world plagued by turmoil and upheaval."
Liberal Leader Stephane Dion also issued a statement.
" . . . I would like to express my deepest sadness and regret at the death of Private Simon Longtin in a roadside bombing in Kandahar.
"We send our most sincere sympathies to Private Longtin's family, comrades and friends as they cope with this tragic loss. Our thoughts and prayers are also with the seven other Canadian soldiers injured in Afghanistan this week. We wish them a full and speedy recovery.
"Today's loss serves as a reminder of the very real challenges the men and women of the Canadian Forces face every day as they undertake this mission, and I speak for all Canadians when I say that we greatly appreciate their sacrifices to help the people of Afghanistan and bring stability to the region."
Defence Minister Peter MacKay said in a statement Longtin was an exceptional Canadian soldier who made the "ultimate sacrifice."
"He served valiantly, and represents Canadian values and traditions in the finest sense.
"Our mission in Afghanistan is noble and in our national interest, and we will forever honour our troops who put themselves on the line to defend those interests and make a positive difference in the lives of others."
© CanWest News Service 2007

Germany: Car bomber sentenced


Investigators check the scene following a car bomb attack at U.S. Rhein-Main Air Base in Frankfurt, western Germany, in this Aug. 8, 1985 file picture. A German court said Friday Aug. 17, 2007 it has ordered the early release on parole of former Red Army Faction member Eva Haule who was convicted in connection with the 1985 murder of a U.S. soldier and the bombing of the U.S. base in Frankfurt. (AP Photo)


German 'Punishment'

INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY

Posted 8/17/2007

Terrorism: How could Eva Haule, a Marxist terrorist, so easily manipulate German justice with only a handful of years in jail for the cold-blooded murder of a U.S. soldier? Not only is it a travesty, it's ominous for Germany.
Without much fanfare, the high court in Frankfurt ruled that Haule, 53, was to be paroled Tuesday after 21 years in jail because she "no longer poses a threat to the public."
Maybe not, sitting in prison, with her murderous little terror group, the Baader-Meinhof Gang, disbanded. But the "public" is irrelevant because Haule was always very specific about her targets.
Haule was first convicted of trying to blow up a NATO school in Oberammergau in 1984, and of document falsification and belonging to a terror group. Later, she was found to be involved in other base attacks, including the August 1985 killing of a 20-year-old U.S. serviceman, Edward Pimental, just to get his ID card.
That card was used the next day to blow up another U.S. base, killing two more and injuring 23. Responding to the outcry, the gang, calling itself the Red Army Faction, showed its true mettle with the message: "We're not misty-eyed social workers."
The German government claims Haule has expressed remorse for her crimes (a requirement for release). Sorry, we don't believe it.
None of Haule's prison activism over the years suggests remorse. Indeed, all she has done in jail is try to rationalize herself. Worse, she has refused to disclose who did the other unsolved murders committed by her gang during its 1975-91 killing rampage.
Considering how many crimes Haule committed, 21 years amounts to just a few years per murder. By one account, Haule really did just six years for the cold-blooded killing of Pimental, because her role in that crime wasn't even addressed by German courts until 2001.
The other 15 years of her "life" sentence were for her role in a car-bomb attack. The 21 years she served is a "life" term, according to German justice. What did she learn while there? That violence isn't necessary in Germany to game the system?
In her first three years, she went on a hunger strike to get moved to a cushier prison. German authorities caved in to her demands.
She got herself listed as a "political prisoner" on several fringe left Web sites to raise public pressure for her release — as if luring a 20-year-old to his death was equivalent to voting Social Democrat.
Then she used free prison photography classes to take pictures of convict women and publish them in a book as a means of raising her public profile to better her chances of getting out.
"As I always say: 'What I do here should get me out of here,' " she told Turkish Daily News in 2007.
Her work was feted around Europe by the radical chic as that of an "anti-imperialist activist." A gallery financed by Austria's government showed her photos.
With plenty of time on her hands, Haule also engaged in activism around the plight of another "political prisoner," the radical leftist cop killer Mumia Abu Jamal.
She signed a "Dear Comrades" letter in 1994 demanding a reprieve for the death-row killer. "The reactionary forces now are up to extinguish every example of struggle for a radically different life and revolutionary perspectives," the letter said. "They take Mumia because he is an example for this struggle, his life stands for our collective revolutionary history."
Why is this important? Apart from al-Qaida, Germany is seeing the rise of new left-wing terror groups such as "mg," an arson group that claims "credit" for more than 25 fires. The slack German justice system is sending these fringe terrorists — as well as Islamofascists — a message of just how lenient they are. Appeasers of terror.
German justice has to do a lot better than this. Haule's abbreviated term in jail isn't even deterrence, let alone punishment.
© Investor's Business Daily, Inc. 2000-2007.



Eva Haule

Algeria: car bomb cell members arrested



Algiers and Lakhdaria attacks
2 suspects in 4/11 and Lakhdaria bombings arrested
Elkhabar, Algeria - Aug 17, 2007

Security services arrested 20 days ago two people suspected of participating in the planning and the execution of 4/11 Algiers attacks and Lakhdaria (Bouira province) attacks in July. A security source reported that the arrest was achieved thanks to information given by the so called “Zoubir Abu Sadjia”, one of the three kamikaze bombers.
Actually security services have confirmed the hypothesis that “Abu Sadjia” is the one who parked the bombed black Mercedes in front of Denmark Embassy and not far from State officials’ residencies. Security services’ investigations with “Abu Sadjia” led to identify two other elements who participated directly in bombing both Government and Bab Ezzouar police station headquarters.
Well-informed security sources mentioned that the two suspects live in Bourouba municipality, not far from Merouane Boudina’s home, who is called “Abou Sadjia”, one of 4/11 attacks kamikazes. They unveiled said that investigators identified the two attacks support cell members.
The same sources added that security services’ Special Forces, and while searching the two suspects’ houses, seized some requisites which have a direct link with the black Mercedes car bomb which was dismantled, and seized also other requisites of a Jack bomb truck that was used in Lakhdaria attacks. El Khabar source refused to provide further information about those requisites as investigations still not finished

US: Ionatron Awarded Army Car Bomb Neutralization Technology Contract

Ionatron Awarded Army Car Bomb Neutralization Technology Contract

TUCSON, Ariz. --(Business Wire)-- Ionatron, Inc., (Nasdaq:IOTN) the Laser Guided Energy (LGE(TM)) Company, and pioneer in next generation Directed Energy Technologies, today announced that they had received a $2.09 million contract from the Army Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ for "ANVILS", a technology development program for the application of directed energy technologies to counter the threat of vehicle-borne Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs). The contract was issued through Subsystems Technologies, Inc. of Rosslyn, VA, as part of an existing services contract that Subsystems has with Picatinny Arsenal.
Dana Marshall, Ionatron's President and Chief Executive Officer, stated, "This contract is the most recent sign of the Army's commitment to developing our LGE technology for their unique missions and applications. We've worked with the Army for several years, and as LGE technology has matured we have seen an increase in our contract opportunities with them. The Army has stated their interest in assuming the lead role in our LGE development for applications under the Close Combat Support program starting during 2008, and they have budgeted multiyear funding for ongoing Laser Induced Plasma Channel ("LIPC") development. We think this is a positive indication of their long term commitment to the promise of Laser Guided Energy."

Mr. Marshall continued, "Ionatron's proprietary LGE weapons technology is uniquely well suited to address some of the Army's most urgent problems, and we look forward to their leadership in bringing this technology to the field. We continue to work with the Navy, our program sponsor on existing LGE development for the past three years, as they investigate new applications for our directed energy technologies."


Forge valuable relationships at The World's Only IP Communications Development Event. Communications Developer Conference is May 15-17, 2007 in Santa Clara.
Click here to learn more about DSP modules and how they power multimedia messaging services for mobile networks while decreasing the development costs.
Forge valuable relationships at The World's Only IP Communications Development Event. Communications Developer Conference is May 15-17, 2007 in Santa Clara.
Click here to learn more about DSP modules and how they power multimedia messaging services for mobile networks while decreasing the development costs.
Vendor Guru has done the research to help you quickly find respected, cutting-edge CRM companies with the products and services that are right for your business. Click here to learn more.
Vendor Guru has done the research to help you quickly find respected, cutting-edge Telephony companies with the products and services that are right for your business. Click here to learn more.

About Ionatron Inc.

Ionatron, Inc. is a solution provider that develops and markets Laser Guided Energy (LGE(TM)) and related products to defense and security customers for unique applications worldwide. Ionatron has significant expertise in the application of high-power lasers, optics and energy management technologies. Headquartered in Tucson, Arizona, Ionatron is focused on solving technology problems directly for its government and security-conscious customers. For more information about Ionatron, please visit www.ionatron.com.

"Safe Harbor" Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995:

Certain statements contained in this News Release constitute "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements involve a number of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements.

Such factors include, but are not limited to: the dependence on sales of a limited number of products and the uncertainty of the timing and magnitude of government funding and orders, dependence on sales to government customers; the uncertainty of patent protection; the uncertainty of strategic alliances; the uncertainty of management tenure; the impact of third-party suppliers' manufacturing constraints or difficulties; management's ability to achieve business performance objectives, market acceptance of, and demand for, the Company's products, and resulting revenues; development and testing of technology and products; manufacturing capabilities; impact of competitive products and pricing; litigation and other risks detailed in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The words "looking forward," "believe," "demonstrate," "intend," "expect," "contemplate," "estimate," "anticipate," "likely" and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date the statement was made. Ionatron undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this news release.

Georgia, US: Man Targeted By Car Bomb

North Georgia Man Targeted By Car Bomb

POSTED: 5:56 pm EDT August 16, 2007


WHITFIELD COUNTY, Ga. -- Investigators believe a north Georgia man was targeted by a car bomb in Whitfield County.
Officials said as 27-year-old James Brock, Junior got into his red pick-up truck Thursday morning, it blew up.
“This appeared to be targeting a specific individual or a specific family -- not a random act like you have in Iraq. This is a totally different type of scenario,” said Special Agent Jerry Scott.
Brock was found lying next to his truck and he was airlifted to a local hospital.
There is no word on his condition.
Police and the GBI are investigating.
Copyright 2007 by WSBTV.com.


Whitfield Truck Bomb Was Retaliation From Biker Gang Shoot-out
WDEF News 12, TN - Aug 17, 2007
Submitted by Rebecca Cruz on August 17, 2007 - 5:10pm. News

Whitfield County law enforcement officials now confirm yesterday's car bomb explosion is the result of a biker gang rivalry.
James Brock, Junior, remains in serious condition at Erlanger hospital after his Dodge Ram exploded when he started the truck.
Sheriff Scott Chitwood says both Brock, junior, and his father, James Brock, Senior, were involved in a shoot-out with another biker gang.
Both father and son are members of the Renegade Bike club.
Chitwood believes rival gang members meant to kill junior in retaliation of the shoot-out a few months ago, "These are apparently two rival biker groups, the Renegades and the Outlaws, and both of them are very well known nationwide. And, apparently, there was an incident and shooting where a young person died down at an adult down in the Atlanta area."
James Brock, Sr, remains in Clayton County Jail, where he faces charges in the shooting that killed Frank Vital at the Crazy Horse Saloon in Forest Park, Georgia.



Explosion Linked to Motorcycle Gang Activity
Jessica Morris
August 17, 2007 - 6:14PM
WTVC, TN - Aug 17, 2007

We have new information about a bombing that's being investigated by several agencies. Authorities believe it was a planned attack that left a 27-year-old man with serious injuries. Whitfield County Sheriff Scott Chitwood says all clues point to the Outlaws, a motorcycle gang who's been fighting with the Renegades. The sheriff says they don't have it narrowed down to an individual suspect, but his detectives are working with state and federal agents to track down all leads.
"Around 6:30 in the morning I heard a big boom like thunder," say Carolyn Marcus, a neighbor.
Little did Marcus know it was a bomb planted in her neighbor's truck. And detectives believe it hit its target -- 27 year old James Brock, Junior.
"James was bleeding out of his eyes and his ears. And he thought his right knee cap was blowed off, but we found out later it was the back of his leg that was blowed off," says Marcus.
Marcus, who's staying in contact with the family, says Brock lost his hand and part of his arm. But why? Investigators agree with neighbors who say the Brocks HAD enemies.
Leading up to Thursday's car bomb explosion, neighbors say James Brock, Junior's wife confessed being scared. Carolyn Marcus tells us that the wife says someone was making repeated threats to their family and home.
Marcus says, "That's all she told me. Just threats, you know. So, I figured it was from the rival gang."
Marcus is referring to the Outlaws -- a rival of the Renegade Motorcycle Club. Detectives say Brock is a Renegade. And Thursday's explosion was likely retaliation.
On June 24th, police say Brock's father -- James Brock Senior -- was involved in a shootout at the Crazy Horse Saloon in Forest Park, Georgia. The shooting resulted in the death of Outlaws member 44-year old Frank Vital.
Retired FBI agent Bob Brown says bombings are nothing new to the Outlaws. And though, they're often involved in fundraisers, like the ride on August 4th for the children of the Ronald McDonald House, Brown says it's no secret the bikers are engaged in ongoing criminal enterprises.
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales unveiled an indictment against 16 members of the Outlaws on Wednesday.
"So whether or not it's loosely organized street youth gangs or organized motorcycle clubs
like this one, if you're engaged in criminal activity, we're going to come after you," he said.
The Justice Department describes the American Outlaw Association as "an international criminal organization whose members engage in acts of violence including murder, attempted murder," and assault. The FBI says the local clubs don't have a history of violence, but have been involved in trafficking and illegal narcotics. But yesterday's violence suggests otherwise. When a father of three nearly lost his life.
Whitfield County Captain Rick Swiney says Brock is in serious condition at Erlanger. Carolyn Marcus tells us that according to the wife, Brock is expected to survive and is even talking and laughing.
We are closely following this story. And we will let you know as soon as detectives make an arrest.

Mogadishu, Somalia: Car bomb kills 5 policemen


3 were killed in an explosion in Mogadishu.

Mine explosion kills 3 in Mogadishu
Thu, 16 Aug 2007 21:25:50
Source: AP
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=19698§ionid=3510205

A land mine explosion under a police car has killed 3 policemen, raising the death toll from violence in Mogadishu to 8 since Wednesday.
Mogadishu's Deputy Police Commissioner, Abdullahi Hassan Barise, said the mine exploded just after he had stepped a few meters away.
The explosion occurred in the Hurawaa neighborhood in northeastern Mogadishu. The commissioner said three of his guards were wounded, but a witness said 3 policemen also died.
"We saw the car sent into the air by the explosion, with huge balls of smoke'' the witness said.
A car bomb killed 5 policemen in Mogadishu Wednesday.
Before the overthrow of the Islamic Courts Union last year, they had succeeded in restoring relative order to Mogadishu and the central and south parts of the country.
The Horn of Africa country is deeply impoverished and has been wracked by violence since 1991.

MHE/RE

Baghdad, Iraq: Car bomb kills 9 wounds 17


A shopkeeper sorts through the wreckage of his mobile phone store, damaged Wednesday night in a car bomb attack in Kirkuk, 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq on Thursday, Aug. 16, 2007. Police said two consecutive car bombs struck a popular market in the northern city on Wednesday night, killing two and wounding more than 30 civilians. (AP Photo / Emad Matti)


Car bomb strikes market district in central Baghdad, killing at least 9, wounding 17
The Associated Press
Thursday, August 16, 2007
BAGHDAD: A car bomb struck a market district during rush hour in central Baghdad on Thursday, killing at least nine people and wounding 17, police said.
The car was parked in a lot above a row of stores near the busy Rusafi square when it exploded about 9 a.m., a police officer said, giving the casualty toll on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to release the information.
A huge fire broke out in the seven-story building and smoke billowed into the air.
Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but the U.S. military has warned it expects Sunni insurgents to try to upstage a September progress report due to be delivered by top commander Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker.
The blast occurred in an area full of food vendors, as well as stores selling clothes, leather bags and shoes.


Nine killed in Baghdad car bomb attack
eveningecho, Ireland
16/08/2007 - 7:11:16 AM
At least nine people were killed and 17 wounded when a car bomb struck a market district during rush hour in central Baghdad today, Iraqi police said.
The car was parked above a row of shops near the busy Rusafi square when it exploded about 9 am local time, a police officer said.
A huge fire broke out in the seven-storey building and smoke billowed into the air.
Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but the US military has warned it expects Sunni insurgents to try to upstage a September progress report due to be delivered by top commander Gen. David Petraeus and US Ambassador Ryan Crocker.



Bomb in Baghdad car park kills 9
Thu 16 Aug 2007, 6:36 GMT
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A car bomb in a parking lot in central Baghdad killed nine people and wounded 17 on Thursday, with the building also set ablaze, police said.
The bomb went off in a busy commercial area near al-Russafi Square in the heart of Baghdad.
Witnesses reported seeing flames pouring from the building as emergency agencies fought the blaze.




At least four people killed in car bomb in central Baghdad

At least four people were killed and six others were wounded in a car bomb explosion in a commercial area in central Baghdad on Thursday, an Interior Ministry source said.
"A car bomb went off around 9:00 a.m. (0500 GMT) in the commercial area near the al-Risafi Square, killing four people and wounding six others," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
The explosion damaged several civilian cars, shops and buildings in the crowded area near the main wholesale market of Shorja in central capital, the source said.
The toll could rise, he said, adding that ambulances are ferrying more casualties to nearby hospitals.
Violence persists in Iraq as sectarian killings, suicide attacks, bombings, and abductions cause dozens of Iraqi casualties daily.
Source: Xinhua
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved



Nine Iraqis killed in Baghdad, 87 gunmen seized in Kirkuk - 2nd Update
Posted on : 2007-08-16 | Author : DPA
News Category : Middle East
Baghdad - At least nine Iraqis were killed and 17 others wounded in a Baghdad attack, while 87 suspected militants were detained in an operation in Kirkuk city, media sources reported on Thursday. In central Baghdad, a car bomb detonated on Thursday morning in Rusafai square near a crowded wholesale market and a bus station, killing nine Iraqis and injuring 17 others, pan-Arab al-Arabiya news broadcaster reported.
Police forces sealed off the scene, preventing civilians from coming closer to the explosion site while the wounded were rushed to nearby hospitals, the independent Voices of Iraq news agency reported citing a police source.
Meanwhile, a joint Iraqi army and police forces at dawn Thursday staged a raid in Senaa neighbourhood in southern Kirkuk, arresting 87 gunmen, Voices of Iraq reported citing a security source.
The forces also confiscated 40 Kalashnikovs and three vehicles, the source added
Kirkuk lies 250 kilometres north-east of the Iraqi capital Baghdad.
On Wednesday evening, four people including a child were killed in an explosion in a Kurdish district of the northern Iraqi town of Mosul.
In the Kurdish Autonomous Region of northern Iraq, recovery operations were continuing Thursday among the rubble of villages following suicide attacks on Tuesday evening that resulted in the deaths of more than 500 people.
The Kurdish regional government also approved a plan to speed up the integration of Kurdish areas to the south of the current autonomous region on Wednesday.
Print Source :
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/94252.html



EXTRA: Iraq official denies deaths in central Baghdad attack
Posted on : 2007-08-16 | Author : DPA
News Category : Middle East
Baghdad - An official source at the Iraqi Ministry of Interior denied Thursday that anyone was killed in the central Baghdad morning attack, state-run al-Iraqiya reported. Contradicting earlier media reports that nine Iraqis were killed and 17 others injured, Civil Defence Sector head Abdel-Rasoul al- Zaidi said a car bomb parked near Rusafai marketplace injured only three people, setting some cars in fire and causing damage to stores and commercial offices nearby.
Police forces sealed off the scene, preventing civilians from coming closer to the explosion site while the wounded were rushed to nearby hospitals, al-Zaidi added.
Rusafai marketplace - one of the most crowded areas in central Baghdad - had previously been the target of attacks.
Print Source :
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/94274.html



Car bomb wounds 3 Iraqis in eastern Baghdad
By 2nd IBCT, 2nd Inf. Div. Public Affairs
Aug 16, 2007 - 1:58:32 PM

Blackanthem Military News, FORWARD OPERATING BASE LOYALTY, Iraq - Three Iraqis were wounded and 38 vehicles destroyed when a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device detonated in the second floor of a parking garage in Rusafa Square in eastern Baghdad Aug. 16.
Following the 9:30 a.m. attack, troops with the 4th Brigade, 1st Iraqi Army Division and Company A, 1st Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, attached to the 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, rushed to the scene and cordoned off the area.
The wounded were transported to Medical City for treatment.


Iraqi kids' cries halt bulldozer's approach
The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.17.2007
advertisement
BAGHDAD — The bulldozer moved closer. The children cried louder.
Then someone heard what few expected amid the horror: four small survivors calling out from ruins of buildings that had become tombs for hundreds of others.
"We didn't hear them calling out for help until moments before a bulldozer would have killed them as it cleared the rubble," said Saad Muhanad, a municipal council member in the Qahtaniya region of northern Iraq.
The discovery of the children — hungry and thirsty but apparently unharmed after two days trapped beneath a toppled building — was a rare uplifting scene Thursday as teams tallied up the grim figures from the deadliest wave of suicide attacks of the war.
Brig. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, interior ministry spokesman, said at least 400 were dead — apparently all members of the ancient Yazidi sect that mixes elements of Islam, Christianity and other faiths.
The four small survivors were related, Muhanad said, but he did not know if they were siblings.
3 U.S. soldiers die
A car bomb struck a Baghdad parking garage in a central commercial district during the morning rush hour, killing at least nine people and wounding 17, police said.
The U.S. military also said three soldiers had been killed. Two soldiers died Wednesday in fighting north of Baghdad. The military said one soldier died Thursday in Baghdad of non-combat causes.
Reshaped power bloc
In Baghdad, political leaders emerged from three days of crisis talks with a new alliance that seeks to save the crumbling U.S.-backed government. But the reshaped power bloc included no Sunnis and immediately raised questions about its legitimacy as a unifying force.

Iraq: 4 car bombs August 16, 2007

Security Incidents for Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Iraq today

(1) MNF-Iraq is reporting the deaths of five U.S. Servicemembers in the crash of a CH-47 Chinook helicopter near Al Taqaddum Air Base in Al Anbar Province on Tuesday, August 14th. The chopper was on a routine post-maintenance check flight when it went down.

(2) The DoD has announced a new death, not previously reported by CENTCOM. Marine Sergeant Michael E. Tayaotao, 27, of Sunnyvale, California, died from enemy action in Al Anbar Province on Thursday, August 9th. A detailed entry on a blog called "from the boondocks" describes Tayaotao as being of Filipino extraction, specifically Igorot from the island of Luzon. His father lives there now, while his mother lives in California. Tayaotao had enlisted in the Marines right out of high school and was due to end his current enlistment in one month, at which point he planned to return home to resume his studies. Unfortunately, those hopes were ended by a roadside bomb. He had requested that if he died in Iraq he wanted to be buried in Poway, California, beside his younger brother who had died last October 2006 while attending the University of California/Irvine.

(3) Deutsche Presse-Agentur is reporting the death of the first Polish soldier in Afghanistan, 28-year-old Lukasz Kurowski. An article from AFP described the incident as an ambush by Taliban insurgents on a NATO patrol in the eastern province of Paktia on Tuesday, August 14th. Kurowski died of his wounds while being airlifted to a field hospital. Five Afghan soldiers were wounded in the attack.

____________________________________


Baghdad:
#1: Insurgents killed three police commandos and wounded two others in southern Baghdad's Doura district, police said

#2: Around 11 a.m., mortars hit Sadr city . No casualties reported.

#3: Around 12 p.m., random fire by an American convoy at Bab Al-Sharji ( downtown ) killing 1 person and injuring another.

#4: Around 12 p.m., two people were killed by sniper shots at Siba’a intersection near Sheikh Omar ( downtown Baghdad) .

#5: Around 12.30 p.m., gunmen opened fire on a patrol for police commandos at Doura neighborhood ( south Baghdad) killing three and injuring two others.

#6: U.S. forces killed 11 suspected insurgents and detained four others during operations targeting al Qaeda in central and northern Iraq, the U.S. military said.


Diyala Prv:
#1: the U.S. military heralded success in Day Two of a nationwide offensive against Sunni insurgents with links to al-Qaida and Shiite militiamen. Ten thousand U.S. troops and 6,000 Iraqi soldiers were involved in air and ground assaults across Diyala and Salahuddin provinces, both north of Baghdad. More than 300 artillery rounds, rockets and bombs were dropped in the Diyala River valley late Monday and early Tuesday, the U.S. military said in a statement. Three suspected al-Qaida gunmen were killed and eight were taken prisoner, the military said. American troops also discovered several roadside bombs rigged to explode, as well as a booby-trapped house, it said. In the Iraqi capital, U.S. special forces and Iraqi soldiers detained three suspected al-Qaida in Iraq leaders and four Shiite militia suspects in separate raids Tuesday, the military said.


Buhriz:
#1: At least resident was killed and 13 wounded in clashes between insurgent gunmen and Iraqi security forces in Buhriz, 60 km (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad, police said. They said seven insurgents were also killed

#2: Iraqi police and residents clashed with gunmen early Wednesday northeast of Baghdad, and 14 people were killed in the fighting, police said. The battle began after mortar rounds fell on Buhriz, a suburb of Baqouba, some 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of the Iraqi capital, a police officer said on condition of anonymity out of security concerns. Residents and local police amassed at the center of town and took up positions in grassy areas on the edge of Buhriz, battling suspected al-Qaida attackers for three hours, the officer said. Eight of those killed were gunmen, and six were civilians, he said. Twenty others were wounded — all civilians, the officer added.


Najaf:
#1: Thousands of followers of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took to the streets in Najaf in a peaceful protest against the detention. Demonstrators shouted anti-American slogans and called for an end to what they called random raids and rights violations targeting the movement.

#2: Two gunmen opened fire against Mohammad Abdul Monaem, an employee from the joint operations office of the Najaf civil administration, in front of his house in al-Jamaaiya neighborhood, north of Najaf, at 9:00 pm on Tuesday, killing him instantly," the source, who refused to be named, told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq. A nearby police patrol hunted down the gunmen until their motorcycle turned around in front of al-Rahma neighborhood, where they hid," he added, noting that Iraqi forces, backed by U.S. troops, cordoned off the neighborhood for three hours. He did not clarify the fate of the two gunmen


Madaen:
#1: Gunmen killed one person and wounded another in Madaen, 45 km (25 miles) south of Baghdad, police said.


Hilla:
#1: A suicide car bomb attacked the convoy of a senior judge on Wednesday in Hilla City, the capital of Babylon province, leaving the judge seriously injured, a provincial police source said. "A suicide car bomber rammed his explosive-laden car into the convoy of Judge Aqeel Adnan Witwit while heading for his office in the 40th Street in central Hilla, some 100 km south of Baghdad, leaving the judge seriously injured and two of his bodyguards killed," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity. Seven pedestrians were also wounded, while several cars of the convoy were damaged in the blast, the source said


Mosul:
#1: a parked car bomb targeted a police patrol in southern Mosul, killing a civilian and injuring ten others, police and army officers said.

#2: Wednesday morning, two car bombs exploded at Noor neighborhood ( downtown Mosul city) targeting police patrols killing ten including three policemen.

#3: gunmen attacked police stations in eastern side of Mosul city by mortars . No casualties reported


Kirkuk:
#1: Tuesday night, a car bomb targeted a police patrol at the celebration yard near Zamzam bakery ( downtown Kirkuk) killing one policeman and injuring 21 others including three civilians.

#2: After ten minutes of Tuesday , a roadside bomb targeted a civilian mini truck on the main way of Kirkuk –Daquq in front of Taza park ( south of Kirkuk city ) killing one passenger and injuring another.


Qahataniya:
#1: (update) Rescuers dug through the muddy wreckage of collapsed clay houses in northwest Iraq on Wednesday, uncovering victims of four suicide bombings that Iraqi officials said killed at least 200 people in one of the worst attacks of the war. It was most vicious attack yet against the Yazidis, an ancient religious community in the region. Some 300 people were wounded in the blasts, said Dakhil Qassim, the mayor of the nearby town of Sinjar. "We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't use cranes because many of the houses were built of clay," Qassim said. "We are expecting to reach the final death toll tomorrow or day after tomorrow as we are getting only pieces of bodies."

At least 500 people were killed and 375 injured in a series of bombings and mortar shelling that ripped through a village in Sinjar town of this northern Iraqi city, hospital sources said. "We have received 500 corpses and 375 injured people," said Kifah Muhammad, the manager of the hospital in Sinjar, a town in Nineveh province.



Afghanistan:
#1: Three police officers attached to the German embassy in Kabul were killed when their vehicles were hit by a roadside bomb on the eastern outskirts of Kabul Wednesday, the German government in Berlin and Afghan police said. A fourth officer was injured in the blast that occurred while the officers were on their way to a shooting range at Bagrami, east of Kabul. Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble stressed that the officers were all attached to the embassy and not part of the European Union police mission EUPOL that trains Afghan police officers. The officers had been travelling in a "specially protected vehicle," Schaeuble said, but this had still not been able to protect them.

#2: Suspected rebel tribesmen attacked security forces guarding a gas pipeline in insurgency-hit southwestern Pakistan, killing two troops, police said Wednesday. Assailants fired assault rifles late Tuesday at the paramilitary post in Sui, a gas-rich tribal area in the southwestern Baluchistan province, police officer Najmuddin Tareen said. The troops returned fire but two were killed, and the attackers retreated toward nearby mountains, Tareen said

#3: three people were killed in an explosion in the restive North-West Frontier Province, which is also borders on Afghanistan. Police were trying to determine the cause of the blast, which occurred in the house of a suspected militant in the Swabi district, the Geo news channel reported.

#4: pro-Taliban fighters fired three rockets at a security checkpoint in nearby South Waziristan. Security forces launched retaliatory strikes against suspected militant hideouts in the mountainous tribal belt.

#5: Hundreds of U.S.-led troops have launched an offensive against al-Qaida and Taliban militants in an area of eastern Afghanistan where Osama bin Laden once hid, officials said Wednesday. Ground troops and airstrikes are targeting "hundreds of foreign fighters" dug into positions in the Tora Bora region of eastern Nangarhar province, coalition spokeswoman Capt. Vanessa Bowman. She did not say when the operation began or how long it was expected to last.

#7: A British man working for a private security company was shot dead in Kabul, Afghanistan, today, the Foreign Office said. The spokesman did not name the victim or explain the circumstances leading up to the death..


:: Article nr. 35378 sent on 16-aug-2007 05:30 ECT
www.uruknet.info?p=35378






Iraq press roundup: 'Iraq needs a dictator'
By Hiba Dawood | Published Aug/15/2007 | Iraq | Unrated
Would the U.S. agree?


By Hiba Dawood
UPI Correspondent
NEW YORK, Aug. 15 -- The Al Rafidayn newspaper published an editorial Tuesday that Iraq could only solve its problem by creating a military leader establishing a dictatorship. The paper mentioned researchers who said this is a test balloon. Others, the paper said, agreed on the idea that any other solution to replace the current chaos would be for the Iraqis' benefit. Another group described the comment as being "ignorant."
Iraqi Institute for Strategic Studies head Falih Abdul Jabar considered the news to be a test balloon to see what the United States thinks about such an idea.
"It doesn't mean that it is an official who said it, it could be other sides to see how the U.S. or Iraq would react," he said. Jabar gave another probability by saying, "Maybe it is to encourage people to think seriously about finding a solution in Iraq." He didn't completely refuse to believe that this could be a "support to military leaders." Another option Jabar gave the paper is that it could be one of the Middle Eastern countries, like Jordan and Saudi Arabia, that are trying to push on that.
There is no way Iraq could have another dictatorship because "it would need someone to be stronger than everybody else. Today, the army and police are weak, the streets are controlled by the militias, plus the U.S. will not agree to that," he said.
Mahdi Army leader arrested in Kufa
Al Rafidayn also reported that the U.S. army announced that in Kufa, 93 miles south of Baghdad, it arrested a leader in the Mahdi Army, a militia loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr. A dozen other Mahdi Army members were arrested in Baghdad.
The announcement said that "the people arrested have been involved in executions, holding attacks against the Multi-National Forces, and smuggling weapons from Iran to Iraq."
The statement said that "this person is a leader of a net of 200 Mahdi Army members and in charge of many assassinations against officials."
Terrorists killed north of Diala
The paper also referred to the latest casualty figures regarding the security operation carried out by the Iraqi forces backed by the U.S. forces in Diala province since last June.
The paper quoted Gen. Abdul Kareem Khalaf, the National Leadership Center's chief, saying that "420 terrorists were killed and 416 others were arrested during the operation in Diala, north of Baghdad." The paper also said that 10,000 Iraqi and U.S troops are carrying out the operation.
Leaders do lunch, but avoid political discussion
The Iraqi international Azzaman paper reported on its front page on the crisis committee meeting called by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki Tuesday with his selection of political leaders.
The headline read: "The bloc's leaders meeting was replaced by a lunch feast."
The paper went in to details as to say that Iraqi sources have described the meetings between the parties' leaders as a "cold (cuts) lunch invitation that was disengaged politically and had nothing to do with the current crises."
The paper also said that the Accordance Front party members didn't engage in any political discussions. The Front has withdrawn its ministers and threatens to do so from Parliament. Sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that Tariq Al Hashimi, an Iraqi vice president and head of the Front, didn't come to the meeting.
The paper also said two Shiite parties that have also withdrawn their ministers over disagreements with Maliki, the Sadr and Fadhila parties were not invited to the meeting, "fearing of escalation in the situation and incapability to solve the crisis." The Iraqi List, lead by former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, was also not invited.
More than 400 killed in attack
Kul Al Iraq paper reports on four car bomb explosions in the Sinjar district, north of Mosul. The explosions killed and wounded more than 400 people, with the toll rising.
The paper said the targets were members of the Yazidi religion, a minority Iraqi group living in Mosul city. The police sources confirmed that more than 200 people were killed and 200 more were wounded in the four bombings.
"Residents witnessed that U.S. helicopters were participating in carrying the wounded to hospitals," the paper said.
The paper reported on a car bomb in Hilla, south of Baghdad, that killed two and wounded seven. The target was a local judge.
Also in Hilla, Khalil Al Athari, a former high-ranking Baath Party member, was assassinated.

TIMELINE-Deadliest bomb attacks in Iraq

REUTERS
=======
TIMELINE-Deadliest bomb attacks in Iraq
Wed Aug 15, 2007 12:32PM BST

(Reuters) - The U.S. military said on Wednesday al Qaeda was the "prime suspect" in suicide bombings overnight on an ancient minority sect that Iraqi officials said killed at least 175 people in northern Iraq.

Here is a list of some of the deadliest bomb attacks in Iraq this year:

January 16, 2007 - A car bomb and suicide bomber strike the Mustansiriya University in central Baghdad, killing at least 70 people and wounding 180.

January 22 - A double car bombing at a second-hand goods market in Bab al-Sharji, central Baghdad, kills 88 people and wounds 160.

February 1 - Two suicide bombers strike at a market in the Shi'ite town of Hilla, killing 61 people and wounding 150.

February 3 - A truck bomb kills 135 people and wounds 305 at a market in the Sadriya quarter of central Baghdad.

February 12 - Multiple car bombs explode in the Shorja wholesale market, killing at least 71 people and wounding 165. At least nine others are killed at the Bab al-Sharji market, also in central Baghdad.

March 6 - Two suicide bombers strike in Hilla, south of Baghdad, killing 105 pilgrims. Insurgents also launch a total of 12 attacks against Shi'ite pilgrims. In all, 137 pilgrims die and 310 are wounded.

March 27 - A truck bomb explodes in Tal Afar, close to the Syrian border and the regional capital of Mosul. The final death toll of 152 makes it the deadliest single insurgent attack in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

April 14 - A suicide car bomber kills 40 people and wounds more than 70 at a bus station in the Iraqi holy city of Kerbala.

April 18 - Multiple car bombings kill 191 people around Baghdad. Near a market in the central Sadriya neighbourhood, one car bomb kills 140 people and wounded 150.

April 28 - A suicide car bomber kills 60 people and wounds 170 at a checkpoint in Kerbala.

May 13 - Suicide truck bombing in northern town of Makhmour kills 50, with 70 people wounded.

June 19 - A car bomb near the Khilani Shi'ite mosque in central Baghdad kills 87 people.

July 7 - A truck packed with explosives covered with hay blows up in a crowded market in the northern town of Tuz Khurmato, killing 150 people and wounding 250.

July 16 - Eighty-five people are killed by a suicide truck bomb in the oil-producing city of Kirkuk. At least 180 were wounded.

August 14 - At least three suicide bombers driving fuel tankers kill at least 175 people in Yazidi residential compounds in the villages of Kahtaniya and al-Jazeera in northern Iraq near the Syrian border. Yazidis are members of a pre-Islamic Kurdish sect who live in northern Iraq and Syria.

© Reuters 2006.


ASSOCIATED PRESS
=================

Some of the Deadliest Attacks in Iraq
Some of the Deadliest Attacks in Iraq
By The Associated
The Associated Press

Some of the deadliest attacks in Iraq since the war began in March 2003:

Aug. 14: Four suicide bombers hit a Kurdish Yazidi community in northwest Iraq, killing at least 200 people and wounding 300 others, the Iraqi military said.

July 7: A suicide truck bomber rips through a market in a Shiite Turkoman town north of Baghdad, killing at least 160 people.

June 19: A truck bomb packed with explosives strikes the Shiite Khulani mosque in central Baghdad, killing at least 87 people.

April 18: A car bomb explodes at a Baghdad market as workers leave for the day, killing 127 people.

March 6: Two suicide bombers blow themselves up in Hillah, about 60 miles south of Baghdad, killing 93 people in a crowd of Shiite pilgrims.

Feb. 3: A suicide truck bomber strikes a market in a predominantly Shiite area of Baghdad, killing 137 people.

Jan. 22: A parked car bomb followed immediately by a suicide car bomber strikes a predominantly Shiite commercial area in the Bab al-Sharqi market in central Baghdad, killing 88 people.

Nov. 23, 2006: Mortar rounds and five car bombs kill 215 people in the Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City.

April 7, 2006: Two suicide bombers attack the Shiite Buratha mosque in northern Baghdad, killing 85 people.

Sept. 29, 2005: Three suicide attackers detonate car bombs in an outdoor market and two nearby commercial streets in the mostly Shiite town of Balad, north of Baghdad, killing at least 102 people.

Sept. 14, 2005: A suicide car bomber strikes as day laborers gather shortly after dawn in a heavily Shiite neighborhood of Baghdad, killing 112 people.

July 16, 2005: A suicide bomber detonates explosives strapped to his body at a gas station near a Shiite mosque in Musayyib, killing at least 90 people.

Feb. 28, 2005: A suicide car bomber targets mostly Shiite police and national guard recruits in Hillah, killing 125 people.

March 2, 2004: A suicide bomber kills at least 85 people at the Imam Hussein shrine in the Shiite holy city of Karbala.

Feb. 1, 2004: Twin suicide bombers kill 109 people in two Kurdish party offices in the northern city of Irbil.

Aug. 29, 2003: A car bomb explodes outside a mosque in Najaf, killing more than 85 people, including Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures


TELEGRAPH, UK
=============
Previous terror atrocities in Iraq

Last Updated: 3:57am BST 20/08/2007

Aug 29, 2003: Najaf

Car bomb explodes outside the Imam Ali mosque in the Shia holy city, killing 125 people including Ayatollah Mohammad al-Hakim, one of Iraq's most prominent Shia ayatollahs.

Feb 1, 2004: Irbil

Twin suicide bombers target two Kurdish party offices, killing 109 people and injuring a further 250.

Mar 2, 2004: Karbala and Baghdad

Suicide bombers attack Shia Ashoura festival-goers, killing at least 140, including 49 Iranian pilgrims.

Feb 28, 2005: Hillah, north of Baghdad

A suicide car bomber targets Shia police and national guard recruits, killing 125 people.

Sept 29, 2005: Balad, north of Baghdad

A string of car bomb attacks in the centre of Balad, a mostly Shia town, kill at least 102 people.

Nov 23, 2006: Sadr City, Baghdad

Mortar fire and five car bombs kill 215 people in the capital's Shia Muslim slum.

Feb 3, 2007: Sadriya, Baghdad

A suicide truck bomber kills at least 128 people and wounds 343 others in a market place. The market was attacked again on April 18, when more than 140 are killed.

Baghdad, Iraq: Car bomb kills 2 wounds 7 judge escapes


An Iraqi police officer examines the remains of a suicide car bomb that struck a market in a Kurdish area in the northern city of Kirkuk, Iraq Friday, Aug. 10, 2007, killing at least eight people and wounding dozens, police said. The attack in Kirkuk, a disputed oil-rich city that has seen a recent rise in ethnic tensions, occurred while the capital remained relatively calm under a driving ban aimed at preventing such attacks during a major Shiite pilgrimage. (AP Photo/Emad Matti)



Senior judge escapes assassination attempt in southern Iraq

A suicide car bomb attacked the convoy of a senior judge on Wednesday in Hilla City, the capital of Babylon province, leaving the judge seriously injured, a provincial police source said.
"A suicide car bomber rammed his explosive-laden car into the convoy of Judge Aqeel Adnan Witwit while heading for his office in the 40th Street in central Hilla, some 100 km south of Baghdad, leaving the judge seriously injured and two of his bodyguards killed," the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
Seven pedestrians were also wounded, while several cars of the convoy were damaged in the blast, the source said.
The judge was ferried to a U.S. military hospital by helicopter, the source said, adding an investigation has been launched.
Violence continues infesting Iraq despite the presence of tens of thousands of U.S. and Iraqi soldiers across the country in a major security crackdown on insurgency and sectarian violence.
Source: Xinhua
Copyright by People's Daily Online, All Rights Reserved



Iraqi police: Suicide car bomb kills 2, wounds 7 south of Baghdad

The Associated Press
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
BAGHDAD: A suicide car bomber killed two people and wounded seven south of Baghdad early Wednesday, police said.
The attacker was apparently targeting the seven-car convoy of a prominent judge in the Hillah area, about 95 kilometers (60 miles) south of the Iraqi capital.
The judge, Aqeel Adnan Witwit, was injured but survived the attack, which took place at morning rush hour about 50 meters (yards) from his home, police said.
Two of Witwit's bodyguards were killed and six other people were hurt, police said.

Mosul, Iraq: 5 Truck Bombs Kill 175 in Iraq's North


A girl walks amidst the rubble of a collapsed Civil Defence building after a car bomb attack in Baiji, 180 km (112 miles) north of Baghdad, August 11, 2007. The car bomb exploded inside the compound of the Civil Defence headquarters in Baiji on Saturday, wounding two people, police said. REUTERS/Sabah al-Bazee (IRAQ)


Truck Bombs Kill 175 in Iraq's North
Religious Sect Targeted By 4 Coordinated Blasts

By Megan Greenwell and Dlovan Brwari
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, August 15, 2007; A01

BAGHDAD, Aug. 14 -- At least 175 people were killed Tuesday night by four truck bombs in a massive coordinated attack against members of a small religious sect, the Yazidis, in northern Iraq, the Iraqi army said.
The nearly simultaneous explosions, in three Yazidi communities near the town of Sinjar, added up to the deadliest attack in Iraq this year and one of the most lethal since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Hundreds of wounded people were flown or driven to hospitals, overwhelming every emergency room in the region, according to George Shlimon, vice mayor of the nearby city of Dahuk.
In Baghdad, the U.S. military reported the deaths of nine American military personnel in three incidents, including the crash of a twin-rotor Chinook helicopter. A truck bomb rendered impassable a bridge on a major route from Baghdad to the north.
Khidr Farhan was on his way to buy vegetables when the first truck bomb exploded near the market in his tiny Yazidi enclave. "I found myself flying through the air, and my face was burning," he said from his hospital bed in Dahuk, where he was recovering from a concussion, a broken leg and a broken rib.
"I felt my leg hurting, and I knew my head was bleeding," he said. "Then I couldn't feel anything. When I woke up, I was in the hospital."
During an interview with a Washington Post special correspondent, Farhan began to cry. "Where is my family?" he said. "I left my wife and my four children at home. Did they die?"
Haji Sido was driving from his workplace to his home in the Tall Aziz community when another of the bombs exploded there. He was not injured, but most of the mud-walled huts in the village collapsed and dead bodies littered the ground, he recounted.
"I ran past people screaming on the ground," he said. "I didn't care, because I had to get to my family. When I got home, my wife said: 'Calm down and thank God. We are safe.' "
Like other recent, large-scale bombing attacks, Tuesday's took place in an area with a relatively small military presence. Since the United States sent an additional 30,000 troops to Iraq this year, insurgents have increasingly targeted areas outside military control. Last month, a bombing near the city of Kirkuk -- another northern city that did not receive additional troops -- killed about 150 people.
The Yazidis are an ancient group whose faith combines elements of many historical religions of the region. They worship a peacock archangel and are considered Satanists by some Muslims and Christians in Iraq, a characterization they reject.
Yazidis largely live apart from other Iraqis, in villages near the Syrian border, to maintain religious purity, and they are forbidden to fraternize with other groups. Most Yazidis speak Kurdish but object to being called Kurds.
Despite such isolation, tensions among the Yazidis, Muslim Kurds and Arab groups in northern Iraq have led to increasingly violent incidents. In April, a 17-year-old Yazidi girl was stoned to death after she eloped with a Sunni Muslim man and converted to Islam. Cellphone video footage of her death, called an "honor killing" by other Yazidis, was broadcast widely on the Internet, setting off a wave of attacks against the group.
Two weeks later, 23 Yazidi factory workers were dragged off a bus and executed in Mosul in apparent retaliation for the teenager's death. Police attributed the attack to the Sunni insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq.
No one asserted responsibility for Tuesday's bombings. Khairi Bozani, a Yazidi who lives in Sinjar, called them the most recent step in a campaign by other Iraqi groups to drive Yazidis out of the country. "They are trying to finish the Yazidis," Bozani said. "If the girl hadn't been killed, they would have found another excuse to attack us."
In Anbar province Tuesday, five Americans died when the Chinook helicopter went down during a training flight, the military said. The cause of the crash is under investigation.
Three other U.S. soldiers were killed Monday by a roadside bomb in the province of Nineveh, in northwestern Iraq, officials said, while one was killed in combat in western Baghdad.
The bridge that was hit by a truck bomb was located in Taji, north of Baghdad.
The vehicle, a fuel tanker, had just passed through an Iraqi army checkpoint about 8:30 a.m. when it detonated on the bridge. The blast killed 10 people and sent three cars plunging into a canal that joins the Tigris River, authorities said. It also destroyed the northern section of the bridge.
The bridge had been operating with only one lane since a bombing in May. It is part of an important artery between Baghdad and Mosul, the biggest city in the north.
In recent months, suicide bombers have repeatedly attacked key bridges around the capital in an attempt to disrupt road traffic and isolate the city. In April, a truck bomb destroyed a large portion of the historic Sarafiya bridge over the Tigris River; on Sunday, a replacement floating span was officially opened.
Also Tuesday, a deputy oil minister was kidnapped by armed men at his home in the Oil Ministry compound in eastern Baghdad, according to ministry spokesman Assem Jihad. Abdel Jabar al-Wagaa, the senior assistant to Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani, was seized along with several other ministry staff members, Jihad said.
The abduction was carried out by gunmen wearing Iraqi security force uniforms who entered the compound late Tuesday afternoon in more than a dozen official vehicles, according to the spokesman.
On May 29, five Britons were kidnapped from the nearby Finance Ministry. No group has asserted responsibility for either incident, and the victims have not been located.
Meanwhile, the U.S. military announced that it has begun a major new offensive involving 16,000 U.S. and Iraqi soldiers in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad. Operation Lightning Hammer is targeting fighters of al-Qaeda in Iraq in the areas surrounding Baqubah, the capital of Diyala.
The number of bombings in Baqubah and Baghdad has declined significantly since 30,000 additional U.S. troops arrived in Iraq this year. But large-scale attacks in smaller towns and rural areas have led some observers to conclude that insurgent groups have merely relocated.
In an interview last week, Brig. Gen. John M. "Mick" Bednarek, who has led the military operation in Baqubah, said that the city has been largely stabilized and that many of the 10,000 troops there would be used to expand the U.S. presence elsewhere in Diyala.
Talks among Iraq's top political leaders continued Tuesday at a summit that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has said he hopes can repair his fractured government.
Maliki did not speak publicly after Tuesday's meetings, but other leaders said the discussions are to continue Wednesday.
Brwari reported from Mosul. Special correspondents Naseer Nouri and Dalya Hassan in Baghdad contributed to this report.



August 15, 2007
Death Toll in Iraq Bombings Rises to 250
By JAMES GLANZ

BAGHDAD, Aug. 15 — The toll in a horrific quadruple bombing in an area of mud and stone houses in the remote northern desert on Tuesday evening reached 250 dead and 350 wounded, several local officials said today, making it the single deadliest coordinated attack since the American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Rescuers and recovery teams were still digging through as many as 200 flattened houses and the death toll could still rise, the officials said. “It is impossible for us to give an exact figure for the dead and wounded,” said Dr. Kifah Kattu, director general the hospital in Sinjar, a few miles north of where the explosions occurred. The four truck bombs were set off in a Kurdish-speaking area dominated by members of the Yazidi religious sect, which combines elements of Islam and ancient Persian religions.
Dr. Kattu cited one village in the area of the explosions, called Al Aziz, where he said 40 of the simple homes had been obliterated and no dead or wounded had yet been recovered. A farmer who survived one explosion, Hasson Dalali, 59, said in a hospital in Tal Afar, a town 25 miles east of the explosions, that he had lost eight members of his family.
“I saw a flash in the sky; I never saw anything like this before,” Mr. Dalali said. He said that after two huge explosions threw him to the ground where he was working his fields, he rushed to his house to check on his family. “The house was completely flattened to the ground,” Mr. Dalali said. “I was looking for any survivor from my family in the rubble. I found only my 12-year-old nephew.”
The nephew had broken ribs and legs and severe wounds to the head, Mr. Dalali said.
Security officials said that the devastation came when two pairs of truck bombs exploded about 5 miles apart in an area close to the Syrian border in what is known as the Shaam Desert. An official at the Interior Ministry in Baghdad said that precise information on the bombings was particularly difficult to obtain because the road between Sinjar and Tal Afar was partly controlled by an Qaeda-linked insurgent group, the Islamic State of Iraq, which is a prime suspect in the bombings.
The area has long been a focus of insurgent activity, prompting a major American-led offensive in 2005 designed to clear the area of groups linked to al Qaeda. Nevertheless, last March a twin truck bombing killed 152 people in Tal Afar, and in July, 155 people died in a single enormous explosion in the northern town of Amerli, the largest death toll in a single attack until this one.
All three towns lie north of the main areas affected by the increase in American troop strength that began in March, supporting the notion that, as in numerous earlier American offensives, insurgents have moved from where they are being attacked and restarted their operations elsewhere.
Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, the top American military spokesman in Iraq, said on Wednesday that there were improvements in security as a result of the troop increase but also said progress was “gradual and sometimes it is uneven, just as we see a mosaic of uneven conditions in Iraq today.”
Asked why insurgents would pick such simple villages in the desert for such a colossal attack, General Bergner said: “Perhaps their vulnerability. Perhaps they were a target that they could attack.”
Religious and ethnic minorities have been constant targets of violence in Iraq, and the Amerli bombing was aimed at a community of Shiite Turkomans, who remain in the country in extremely small numbers. But the tension in Yazidi areas has been particularly high since April, when, in a primitive episode captured on video, Yazidis stoned to death a woman of their own sect for dating a Sunni Arab.
After a video of the stoning appeared on the Internet, Sunni gunmen stopped minibuses filled with Yazidis and killed 23 of them.
Stephen Farrell and other employees of The New York Times contributed reporting from Tal Afar, Mosul and Baghdad.
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company



CREDIT: Reuters
The wreckage of a vehicle used in a car-bomb attack lies on a road in Kirkuk, 250 kilometres north of Baghdad on Tuesday. One policeman was killed while eight other people were wounded, police said.

Bombers target Yazidi religious minority group, wounding 200
Reuters
Wednesday, August 15, 2007

The wreckage of a vehicle used in a car-bomb attack lies on a road in Kirkuk, 250 kilometres north of Baghdad on Tuesday. One policeman was killed while eight other people were wounded, police said.

BAGHDAD (Reuters) -- Suicide bombers driving fuel tankers killed at least 175 people in apparently coordinated attacks in northwestern Iraq on Tuesday, the Iraqi army said, in one of the worst incidents of its kind in the four-year-old war.
Iraqi army captain Mohammad al-Jaad said at least another 200 people were wounded in the bombings in Yazidi residential compounds in the Kahtaniya, al-Jazeera and Tal Uzair areas near the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar, close to the Syrian border.
The mayor of Sinjar, Dakheel Qassim Hasoun, gave the same casualty figures.
Police earlier said Tuesday's bombings appeared to target the Yazidis, members of a pre-Islamic Kurdish sect who live in northern Iraq and Syria.
The United States has sent an additional 30,000 troops to Iraq this year and moved them from large bases into small neighbourhood outposts in an effort to reduce sectarian violence in the capital and surrounding provinces.
The U.S. military said it was helping to ferry wounded people to hospitals in the town of Tal Afar.
First Lieut. Stephen Bomar, spokesman for the 25th Infantry Division, said initial reports suggested 30 people were killed and 60 wounded in attacks by two suicide bombers.
In November 2006, six car bombs in different parts of northeast Baghdad's sprawling Shi'ite slum of Sadr City killed 202 people and wounded 250, while multiple car bombs around the capital killed 191 around Baghdad in April.
In the worst single attack this year, a truck packed with explosives blew up in a market in the northern town of Tuz Khurmato in July, killing 150 people and wounding 250.
Earlier on Tuesday, a suicide truck bomber killed 10 people and destroyed a bridge linking Baghdad to the north.
The U.S. military also announced that 10 service members had died in the past two days, including five in a helicopter crash.
It said the CH-47 Chinook helicopter crashed near al-Taqaddum air base outside Falluja, 50 km west of Baghdad, while on a "routine post-maintenance check flight."
There was no indication of whether it was shot down and an investigation was under way.
The deaths of the five on board the helicopter takes the total number of U.S. military personnel killed in Iraq since the 2003 invasion to topple Saddam Hussein to at least 3,699.
So far in August at least 41 U.S. service members have died, already more than half of July's total of 71.
U.S. President George W. Bush, under pressure to show results in the unpopular war or start bringing troops home, has warned that August would be a bloody month.
U.S. forces launched Operation Lightning Hammer, a big offensive of 16,000 troops beginning with an airborne assault overnight, part of a major new push targeting Sunni Islamist al-Qaida fighters and Shi'ite militias accused of links with Iran.
The latest operation targets militants who fled an earlier crackdown in the Diyala provincial capital of Baquba. The larger, countrywide Operation Phantom Strike was announced on Monday.
Al-Qaida is widely seen as trying to influence debate in Washington by stepping up attacks in Iraq before a crucial progress report on the war is delivered to Congress on Sept. 15.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said U.S. forces would launch a series of operations over the next 30 days.
Yazidis have been the target of attacks before. In April, gunmen shot dead 23 Yazidi factory workers in Mosul in apparent retaliation for the stoning of a teenage Yazidi girl several weeks earlier.
Police said the girl had been stoned to death by local Yazidis after falling in love with a Muslim man and converting to Islam.
Yazidis in Iraq say they have often faced discrimination because the chief angel they venerate as a manifestation of God is often identified as the fallen angel Satan in biblical terminology.
Yazidis, who say they suffered massacres during the secular rule of Saddam Hussein, also believe God created good and evil in the world.
© The Leader-Post (Regina) 2007

Copyright © 2007 CanWest Interactive

Death toll from Iraq bombings rises
Posted Wed Aug 15, 2007 5:22pm AEST
ABC Online, Australia - Aug 15, 2007

The death toll from brutal truck bombings targeting the ancient Yazidi religious sect in northern Iraq has risen to more than 200, according to a local government official.
The Mayor of Sinjar, a town in the northern province of Nineveh where four truck bombs exploded on Tuesday, voiced fears that the toll could rise further.
"More than 200 people were killed and an equal number of people are wounded," Dakhil Qassim Hassun said.
"The casualties are expected to rise as many victims are still trapped under the debris."
Four truck bombs exploded in the villages of Al-Khataniyah and Al-Adnaniyah, which are mainly inhabited by Yazidis, local officials said.
Authorities have imposed a total curfew in the area.
Mr Hassoun said only vehicles involved in rescue efforts would be allowed to travel through the area.
He said it would be impossible to establish a final death toll any time soon because many bodies were still buried in the rubble of up to 30 houses destroyed in the blasts.
Yazidis - who number some 500,000 - speak a dialect of Kurdish but follow a pre-Islamic religion and have their own cultural traditions.
US response
The White House swiftly condemned the bombings as "barbaric attacks on innocent civilians," and vowed to help Iraqi forces "beat back these vicious and heartless murderers," spokeswoman Dana Perino said.
The US military gave a lower death toll of 60, but said five car bombs had exploded in the region.
"Four vehicles were reported to have entered a crowded bus station and exploded as soon as they were inside of Khataniyah... killing approximately 30 people," the military said in a statement.
It said another car bomb exploded in a residential area of al-Jazeera, south-west of Khataniyah and also killed another 30 people.
US forces also said an unknown number of people were trapped under the debris and up to 20 houses were destroyed.
- AFP/Reuters



Iraqi officials: Truck bombings killed at least 500

* Story Highlights
* NEW: High number of deaths reported by local officials in northern Iraq
* Suicide truck bombs targeted mainly Kurdish religious minority Yazidi sect
* Yazidis stoned teenage Yazidi girl to death for being seen with Sunni man
* Sunnis then killed about two dozen Yazidi men in retaliation

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- The death toll in the suicide bombings Tuesday in northern Iraq has risen to at least 500, local officials in Nineveh province said Wednesday.
Iraqi Army and Mosul police sources earlier put the number at 260, but said it was likely to rise. 320 were reported wounded.
The Tuesday truck bombs that targeted the villages of Qahtaniya, al-Jazeera and Tal Uzair, in northern Iraq near the border with Syria, were a "trademark al Qaeda event" designed to sway U.S. public opinion against the war, a U.S. general said Wednesday.
The attacks, targeting Kurdish villages of the Yazidi religious minority, were attempts to "break the will" of the American people and show that the U.S. troop escalation -- the "surge" -- is failing, Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon said.
The bombings highlight the kind of sectarian tensions the troop surge was designed to stop.
Al Qaeda in Iraq is predominantly Sunni, and Mixon said members of the Yazidi religious minority have received threatening letters, called "night letters," telling them "to leave because they are infidels."
"This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will -- almost genocide when you consider the fact the target they attacked and the fact that these Yazidis, out in a very remote part of Nineveh province, where there is very little security and really no security required to this point," Mixon said. VideoWatch the grim aftermath of the suicide bombings »
Sunni militants, including members of al Qaeda in Iraq, have targeted Yazidis in the area before.
Brig. Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf, an Interior Ministry spokesman, said there were three suicide trucks carrying two tons of explosives. At least 30 houses and other buildings were destroyed.
Khalaf said the carnage looks like the aftermath of a "mini-nuclear explosion." More bodies are expected to be found. See a timeline of deadliest attacks in Iraq »
The U.S. military said there were five bombings -- four at a crowded bus station in Qahtaniya and a fifth in al-Jazeera.
The massacre comes ahead of next month's report to Congress by Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker on progress in Iraq.
"We still have a great deal of work to do against al Qaeda in Iraq, and we have great deal of work to do against al Qaeda networks in northern Iraq," Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, a Multi-National Force-Iraq spokesman, said Wednesday.
The office of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki blamed Sunni extremists for the "monstrous crime." He said a committee has been formed to investigate.
Ashraf Qazi, the U.N. secretary-general's special representative for Iraq, called the attack an "abominable crime aimed at widening the sectarian and ethnic divide in Iraq."
Qazi urged Iraqi authorities to bolster their efforts to protect minorities.
The Yazidi sect is a mainly Kurdish minority, an ancient group that worships seven angels, in the form of peacocks, who are subordinate to the supreme god who created the universe.
A couple of related incidents in the spring highlighted the tensions between Sunnis and Yazidis.
In April, a Kurdish Yazidi teenage girl was brutally beaten, kicked and stoned to death in northern Iraq by other Yazidis in what authorities said was an "honor killing" after she was seen with a Sunni Muslim man. Although she had not married him or converted, her attackers believed she had.
The Yazidis condemn mixing with people of another faith.
That killing is said to have spurred the killings of about two dozen Yazidi men by Sunni Muslims in the Mosul area two weeks later.
Attackers affiliated with al Qaeda pulled 24 Yazidi men out of a bus and slaughtered them, according to a provincial official.

CNN's Arwa Damon, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Raja Razek contributed to this report.
Copyright 2007 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.

Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/08/15/iraq.main



Residents gather at the site of a suicide bomb attack in the village of Kahtaniya west of Mosul, northwest of Baghdad August 15, 2007. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari


Iraqis dig for bodies after bombs kill 200
Wed Aug 15, 2007 11:42PM BST
By Paul Tait

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Rescuers dug through the rubble of bomb-flattened buildings in a northern Iraqi village on Wednesday as residents, many dazed and crying, looked for loved ones after suicide attacks that killed more than 200 people.
The U.S. military said al Qaeda was the "prime suspect" in Tuesday night's co-ordinated truck bombings that hit residential areas of members of the minority Yazidi sect, who are viewed by Sunni militants as infidels.
U.S. officials have said they feared al Qaeda would launch a "spectacular" strike on civilians in the weeks leading up to mid-September, when the U.S. Congress is due to receive a progress report on the military and political fronts in Iraq.
The U.S. military launched a major new offensive in Iraq this week in a bid to thwart attacks by al Qaeda and Shi'ite militias. The operations are focused on the farmlands and villages around Baghdad that have been havens for militants.
In scenes reminiscent of an earthquake zone, bodies lay in the street covered in blankets amid the shattered ruins of clay-built houses. The buildings, mostly one-storey structures, had been completely razed.
"This is a catastrophe that cannot be described in words," said the governor of Nineveh province, Duraid Kashmoula, adding that more than 200 people were killed and 300 wounded.
He said he believed the toll could rise as many were believed buried beneath the rubble that bulldozers were trying to shift. Many people were listed as missing.
Kashmoula declared the area a disaster zone and asked for central government help. When he toured the scene he was besieged by people pleading for help in finding loved ones.
"The scale of the destruction is unimaginable," said another visitor to the scene, a regional government official.
The official said attackers driving truck bombs made more lethal by cargos of pebbles struck the villages of Kahtaniya and al-Jazeera west of Iraq's third-largest city Mosul, wreaking devastation that stunned even war-numbed Iraqis.
Television pictures showed badly burned and screaming survivors, many of them children, in hospital.
"People there were desperate looking for their relatives. Some were digging through rubble with their hands. I saw 20 bodies in the street, some of them burned," said the official.
The death toll appeared to be the highest in any one attack since November, when six car bombs in different parts of Baghdad's Shi'ite Sadr City killed 200 people and wounded 250. Car bombs killed 191 around Baghdad on one day in April.
In a fresh attack in north Iraq on Wednesday, two car bombs struck a crowded market in a Kurdish area in the city of Kirkuk, killing five people and wounding 30, police said.
HALLMARKS
The U.S. military said it was too early to say who was responsible for Tuesday's truck blasts, but their scale and apparently coordinated nature were hallmarks of al Qaeda.
"We're looking at al Qaeda as the prime suspect," said U.S. military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Christopher Garver.
Iraq's political leaders, including Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, condemned the "heinous" bombings.
"This indiscriminate and heartless violence only strengthens our resolve to continue our mission against the terrorists who are plaguing the people of Iraq," U.S. ambassador Ryan Crocker and military commander General David Petraeus, who will both deliver the progress report, said in a joint statement.
In the aftermath of the blast, authorities imposed a total curfew in the Sinjar area, which is close to the Syrian border.
Lieutenant-Colonel Mike Donnelly, U.S. military spokesman for northern Iraq, said U.S. forces were assisting Iraqi emergency agencies as they sifted through the rubble.
Yazidis are members of a pre-Islamic Kurdish sect who live in northern Iraq and Syria and say they are persecuted because of their beliefs. They tend to stay segregated from the people among whom they live.
"The town's residents are poor. They don't have any connection to a political party. The town has no police force and the army does not have a presence to protect it," said Kahtaniya resident Abu Salam.
In April, gunmen shot dead 23 Yazidi factory workers in Mosul in apparent retaliation for the stoning several weeks earlier of a teenaged Yazidi girl who police said had fallen in love with a Sunni Arab and converted to Islam.
(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny in Baghdad)
© Reuters 2006.



Erbil part of 'the other Iraq'

Bernd Debusmann
Reuters
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
ERBIL, Iraq -- The Ministry of Tourism for Kurdish northern Iraq has 417 employees and big plans.
"We need three or four times as many hotels as we have now," said the tourism minister, Nimrud Youkhana. "And we need to get more airlines to fly here."
Vacation in Iraq? More hotels in a country whose name evokes images of bombs, kidnappings and beheadings?
The three northern provinces, Erbil, Dohuk and Sulaimaniya, have blossomed into a quasi-independent state in the 16 years since the United States placed a protective umbrella, or no-flight zone, over the region to stop a genocidal anti-Kurdish campaign waged by Saddam Hussein.
Administered by the Kurdistan Regional Government, the provinces have largely escaped the violence that has been tearing apart the rest of Iraq since the U.S. invasion in 2003 toppled Saddam and unleashed long-suppressed sectarian hostility.
"We have some way to go still," Youkhana said, "but we plan to eventually hold annual folklore events like the Jerash festival," an event in Jordan that draws international performers each summer.
The ministry is hoping to attract customers like Gulf Arabs who appreciate mountain resorts in an Alpine setting with a relaxed attitude toward alcohol, as well as Europeans in search of exotic destinations and archaeological remains dating back thousands of years.
There was even an ad campaign on U.S. television last year for "The Other Iraq," in which locals spoke of the relatively safely of the area compared to the rest of Iraq.
Youkhana's plans, and the mere existence of the Tourism Ministry, highlight a bullish view of the future of the Kurdish region, an optimism evident in building projects, from a 6,000-shop mall to a string of U.S.-style gated communities with names like Dream City, Empire Villas and American Village.
Near the airport, Naz City, a new complex of 14 high-rise apartment towers, is cabled for high-speed Internet. Hotels under construction include one by the German luxury chain Kempinski.
And rising in the shadow of Erbil's citadel, near where Alexander the Great defeated King Darius of Persia, the Nishtiman mall features the region's first escalator, a magnet for children riding it up and down in wide-eyed wonder.
There are no detailed figures on how much money has been invested in the region since 2003. The Board of Investment, a government agency set up last summer, has approved more than $3.5 billion in development projects.
The Kurds' main argument to persuade foreigners to visit and invest is security: there is no other place in Iraq where a foreigner can shop in local markets or walk the streets without fear of being killed or kidnapped.
"I feel safer in Erbil or Sulaimaniya than in Camden, New Jersey," said Harry Schute, a retired U.S. Army colonel who served in Iraq and is now a security adviser to the regional government's president, Massoud Barzani. "But people hear 'Iraq' and they think violence. There's a lack of understanding that Baghdad and Erbil are different worlds."
So different that the regional government has all the trappings of an independent state - its own flag, its own army, its own border patrol, its own national anthem, its own education system, even its own stamp inked into the passports of visitors.
Turkey, Iran and Syria -- all of which have sizable Kurdish minorities -- are viewing the regional government's progress with considerable concern. They fear that full independence for the Iraqi region would set off a chain reaction in the region.
The Iraqi Kurds' sense of tranquillity was shattered by two bombs in May - a truck bomb outside the regional government's Interior Ministry killed 15 people and wounded more than 100 and three days later, a car bomb in the office of Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party killed 30 people and injured 50.
The government responded by stepping up security, already tight, and virtually sealing the roads into regional-government-controlled territory to non-Kurds. Travelers from outside the region are not allowed to pass unless a Kurdish resident meets them in person and "guarantees" their stay.
Despite the May bombs, Austrian Airlines, the only European carrier with a regular service to Erbil, added a flight to its schedule in July to bring Vienna-Erbil connections to four a week. The flights are usually crowded.
"The bomb attacks did not dent business interest," said Bayan Sami Abdul Rahman, who heads the Kurdish Development Corporation. "In fact, inquiries picked up after a few days."
They did not dent a booming business in luxury cars, either. "Things are looking good," said Lezan Shafeea, a sales manager at the sprawling Mercedes dealership in Erbil. "We are selling more top-end models, at $138,500 apiece, than midsize cars."
These are cash-only deals, because the region's embryonic financial system has no provision for consumer credit.
Obstacles to opening up the region to the world, Kurdish officials say, include the travel advisories governments issue to their citizens. The U.S. State Department, for example, makes no distinction between the Kurdish north and the rest of Iraq and "continues to strongly warn" against travel there.
But other countries have taken the region off their list of life-threatening destinations, said Falah Mustafa Bakir, who heads the Foreign Relations Department and is the region's de facto foreign minister. "Denmark, Japan, Austria, Sweden and the Netherlands have all changed their advisories," he said.
Not even the rosiest optimist predicts a travel boom soon to the region, but a British company, Hinterland Travel, led a group of tourists in their 50s and 60s on a package tour through the three provinces administered by the regional government in May. Another is scheduled for September. "This is for people interested in archaeology and history," said the company's owner, Geoff Hann. "And who are not faint of heart."
© Reuters 2007



Iraqi Officials Lead Recovery Efforts After Devastating Khahtaniya and Jazeera Car-Bomb Attacks
Fri, 08/17/2007 - 14:47 — admin

WASHINGTON, Aug. 16, 2007 – Local, provincial and central government leaders converged in western Nineveh province, Iraq, as 3rd Iraqi Army Division soldiers and emergency workers in the villages of Khahtaniya and Jazeera continued their rescue efforts in the wake of five car-bomb attacks that killed an estimated 275 people and wounded 400 others Aug. 14.

National, provincial and local leaders were greeted with cheers by citizens and relief workers. The group walked the streets assessing damages in both villages and interacting with citizens.

“So far the accounting of casualties has been very speculative,” said Army Col. Stephen Twitty, commander of 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division. “The villagers and rescue workers are still trying to find those missing, and their efforts, and those of the local, provincial and central government leadership, along with the ISF here, have been tremendous. These people are clearly unified in this effort.”

Soldiers from 3rd Iraqi Army Division, in conjunction with U.S. soldiers from 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment, and 4th Squadron, 6th Air Cavalry Regiment, are assisting the recovery efforts. The 3rd Iraqi Army Division has provided earth-moving equipment and food and medical supplies to the villages, and Iraqi police are securing the areas, U.S. officials said.

“This is an act of desperation by a group of maniacs who continue to offer only death, destruction and violence to the innocent citizens of Iraq,” said Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin R. Mixon, commander of 25th Infantry Division and Multinational Division North. “The efforts of the 3rd (Iraqi Army) soldiers are heroic as they continue to work tirelessly to save as many citizens as they can, proving their commitment to all of Iraq’s people regardless of ethnicity or sect.”

Coalition forces have provided 2,880 humanitarian meals, 4,608 bottled waters and vast amounts of medical supplies to include medicines and bandages. Coalition forces also have airlifted 5,760 additional meals, with 3,500 more being coordinated for distribution, and enough medical supplies to support roughly 2,000 casualties.

Source: AFISIraqi Officials Lead Recovery Efforts After Devastating Khahtaniya and Jazeera Car-Bomb Attacks
Fri, 08/17/2007 - 14:47 — admin
WASHINGTON, Aug. 16, 2007 – Local, provincial and central government leaders converged in western Nineveh province, Iraq, as 3rd Iraqi Army Division soldiers and emergency workers in the villages of Khahtaniya and Jazeera continued their rescue efforts in the wake of five car-bomb attacks that killed an estimated 275 people and wounded 400 others Aug. 14.
National, provincial and local leaders were greeted with cheers by citizens and relief workers. The group walked the streets assessing damages in both villages and interacting with citizens.
“So far the accounting of casualties has been very speculative,” said Army Col. Stephen Twitty, commander of 4th Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division. “The villagers and rescue workers are still trying to find those missing, and their efforts, and those of the local, provincial and central government leadership, along with the ISF here, have been tremendous. These people are clearly unified in this effort.”
Soldiers from 3rd Iraqi Army Division, in conjunction with U.S. soldiers from 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment, and 4th Squadron, 6th Air Cavalry Regiment, are assisting the recovery efforts. The 3rd Iraqi Army Division has provided earth-moving equipment and food and medical supplies to the villages, and Iraqi police are securing the areas, U.S. officials said.
“This is an act of desperation by a group of maniacs who continue to offer only death, destruction and violence to the innocent citizens of Iraq,” said Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin R. Mixon, commander of 25th Infantry Division and Multinational Division North. “The efforts of the 3rd (Iraqi Army) soldiers are heroic as they continue to work tirelessly to save as many citizens as they can, proving their commitment to all of Iraq’s people regardless of ethnicity or sect.”
Coalition forces have provided 2,880 humanitarian meals, 4,608 bottled waters and vast amounts of medical supplies to include medicines and bandages. Coalition forces also have airlifted 5,760 additional meals, with 3,500 more being coordinated for distribution, and enough medical supplies to support roughly 2,000 casualties.
Source: AFIS