Bombings and mortar fire after curfew lifted in Baghdad

Sunnis and Shiites have traded bombings and mortar fire against mainly religious targets in Baghdad, killing at least 68 people after authorities lifted a curfew that had briefly calmed a series of sectarian reprisal attacks.

Sunnis and Shiites have traded bombings and mortar fire against mainly religious targets in Baghdad, killing at least 68 people after authorities lifted a curfew that had briefly calmed a series of sectarian reprisal attacks.

At least six of yesterday’s attacks hit clearly religious targets, concluding with a car bombing after sunset at the Shiite Abdel Hadi Chalabi mosque in the Hurriyah neighbourhood that killed 23 and wounded 55.

A separate suicide bombing killed 23 people at an east Baghdad fuel station, where people had lined up to buy kerosene.

In addition to those known to have been killed yesterday, police found nine more bullet-riddled bodies, including a Sunni Muslim tribal sheikh, off a road south-east of Baghdad. It was unclear when they died.

The surge of violence deepened the trauma of residents already shaken by fears the country was teetering on the brink of sectarian civil war, threatened talks among Iraqi politicians struggling to form a government and raised questions about US plans to begin drawing down troop strength this summer.

Iraq began to tilt seriously toward outright civil war after the February 22 bombing of the important Shiite Askariya shrine in the mainly Sunni city of Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad.

US President George Bush decried the latest surge in sectarian violence yesterday and said that for Iraqis “the choice is chaos or unity”.

In congressional testimony, National Intelligence Director John Negroponte said a civil war in Iraq could lead to a broader conflict in the Middle East, pitting the region’s Sunni and Shiite powers against one another.

Defence Intelligence Agency chief Lt. Gen. Michael Maples said the sectarian violence stemmed from a core of Sunni Arab insurgents who could exploit “social, economic, historical and religious grievances”.

“Networks based on these relationships remain the greatest threat to long-term stability in Iraq,” Maples said.

The sectarian violence has hit Baghdad hardest because the population in the capital is evenly divided between Shiites and Sunnis, more so than in any other region of the country.

At about the same time as the attack on the Shiite Abdel Hadi Chalabi mosque, a mortar round landed near the Shiite Imam Kadhim shrine in the Kazimiyah neighbourhood on the opposite side of the Tigris River, killing one and wounding 10.

Those attacks appeared to have been in retaliation for assaults on Sunni places of worship earlier in the day.

North of Baghdad, a blast badly damaged a Sunni mosque where the father of Saddam Hussein was buried in the family’s ancestral hometown, Tikrit. The Iraqi Islamic Party reported a bomb hit the Sunni Thou Nitaqain mosque in the Hurriyah neighbourhood, killing three and wounding 11.

Gunmen in two speeding cars opened fire on the Sunni al-Salam mosque in the western Baghdad’s Mansour district, killing a guard.

Late yesterday, police reported finding the body of Shiite cleric Hani Hadi handcuffed, blindfolded and shot in the head near a Sunni mosque in Baghdad’s notorious Dora neighbourhood.

One of the day’s bloodiest attacks came when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives vest packed with ball bearings among people lined up to buy kerosene at a crowded filling station in east Baghdad. The blast killed 23 people and wounded 51, leaving behind the charred and twisted remains of wheeled carts that customers had used to transport fuel canisters to the station.

A car bombing in the same neighbourhood targeted a police patrol and killed five people and wounded 17 – all civilians.

Another car bomb hit a small market opposite the Shiite Timimi mosque in the mostly Shiite Karradah neighbourhood, killing six people and wounding 16.

Separately and in an unusual move, the government issued a statement declaring that 379 people had been killed and 458 wounded as of 4pm yesterday in the sectarian violence tied to the Askariya bombing.

The Washington Post reported yesterday that more than 1,300 people were killed in the reprisal attacks. The Cabinet statement, however, said “what was reported in a foreign newspaper were inaccurate and exaggerated numbers of victims”.

More than 60 relatives of the dead – many of them women dressed in black and beating their breasts as they wailed in grief – assembled with empty coffins at the morgue to take away their dead family members. One young man, who refused to give his name, said his three brothers had gone out to buy bread on Saturday night and were gunned down in a drive-by attack.

National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie, meanwhile, travelled to the Shiite holy city of Najaf yesterday to meet with Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, the Shiite community’s most revered spiritual leader. Al-Rubaie emerged to tell reporters: “The way to forming the government is difficult and planted with political bombs. We ask the Iraqi people to be patient, and we expect forming the government will take a few months.”

In the south yesterday, two British soldiers were killed in Amarah, 180 miles from Baghdad, the British Defence Ministry reported in London, but gave no other details. A witness said a car bomb targeted a British patrol and helicopters were seen taking away casualties.

The US military reported a US soldier was killed by small-arms fire west of Baghdad on Monday. No details were provided.

The death brought to at least 2,292 the number of members of the US military who have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003. The figure includes seven military civilians.

In other violence yesterday, a roadside bomb targeting the convoy of a defence ministry adviser killed five soldiers and injured seven others in east Baghdad. The adviser, Lt. Gen. Daham Radhi al-Assal, escaped unharmed.

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