Attack on Iraq Interior Ministry kills 21 (AP) Updated: 2006-01-09 22:20
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Insurgents exploded a suicide car bomb and launched two
mortar shells at Iraq's Interior Ministry during National Police Day
celebrations Monday, killing 21 people and injuring 24, police said.
An Internet statement by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in the name of his al-Qaida in
Iraq terrorist group rebuked Sunni Arabs for taking part in last month's
parliamentary elections, saying they had "thrown a rope" to save U.S. policy.
Meanwhile, the U.S. military said eight U.S. troops and four American
civilians died aboard a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter that crashed late
Saturday in northern Iraq. The military initially said only that there were
eight passengers and four crew aboard.
The military statement came after a particularly deadly four-day period for
Americans, with 28 killed since Thursday.
With the latest military deaths, at least 2,207 U.S. service members have
died since the war started in 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
The military said it wasn't yet known what caused the crash and an
investigation would take some time. The helicopter went down about seven miles
east of Tal Afar, a northern city near the Syrian border that has seen heavy
fighting with insurgents.
The Black Hawk was part of a two-helicopter team providing support for the
101st Airborne Division and was flying between bases when communications were
lost, the military said.
It was the deadliest helicopter crash in Iraq since a CH-53 Sea Stallion went
down in bad weather in western Iraq on Jan. 26, 2005, killing 31 U.S. service
members.
The attack on the Interior Ministry began with a suicide car bomber who
exploded his vehicle near an entrance checkpoint. Less than an hour later, two
mortar rounds landed about a half-mile from where police were gathered to mark
National Police Day.
At least 21 people were killed and 24 injured, mostly policemen, said police
Sgt. Abdel Hadi Hassan. Several police cars were destroyed in the explosions,
and pieces of body parts could be seen on the ground.
In other violence Monday, gunmen assassinated an investigative judge in
Kirkuk, police Capt. Farhad Talabani said. In Baghdad, gunmen fired on three
people working on Iraq's de-Baathification commission, killing one, police Capt.
Qassim Hussein said. Gunmen also killed an Iraqi intelligence officer and a
doctor in separate attacks, Hussein said. Five bodies bound and blindfolded were
found shot to death in Baghdad late Sunday, police said.
Five people died in separate attacks in Baghdad on Sunday, including a
policeman killed by a suicide car bomber targeting an Interior Ministry patrol.
Seven others were wounded.
The Internet statement by al-Zarqawi was posted Monday on an Islamic Web site
known for publishing extremist material. The authenticity could not be
confirmed, but the tape sounded like the Jordanian-born leader of the group.
"This is a call to the Sunnis, in general and the followers of the Islamic
Party in particular," al-Zarqawi said, referring to the Islamic Party in Iraq.
The party is the biggest political home for Iraq's Sunni Arabs, with Mohsen
Abdul-Hamid its spiritual leader.
"Where are you being led to? Don't you fear God?" al-Zarqawi asked.
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