Attack near Shiite shrine in Iraq kills 49 (AP) Updated: 2006-01-05 19:53
A suicide bomber set off explosives near one of Shiite
Islam's holiest shrines Thursday, killing almost 50 people, officials said.
I Iraqi police retrieve personal articles from victims of a
roadside bomb, Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2006, in Kirkuk, Iraq.
[AP] |
The blast near the Imam Hussein shrine in central Karbala, 50 miles south of
Baghdad, killed 49 people and injured 52, said Karbala police Col. Razaq
al-Taie.
The site was a scene of chaos afterward with men ferrying the wounded in push
carts and pools of blood on the ground. The bomber appeared to have set off the
explosion only about 30 yards from the shrine in a busy shopping area.
The bomber detonated about 17 pounds of explosives and several hand grenades,
Al-Taie said.
Al-Khazraji blamed the attack on "takfiris and Saddamists." The takfiri
ideology is followed by extremist Sunni Muslims bent on killing anyone
considered to be an infidel, even fellow Muslims who disagree with their
doctrine. Al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is a takfiri.
Also Thursday, a suicide bomber blew himself up Thursday outside a police
recruiting center in the restive city of Ramadi, killing at least 30 people and
injuring another 40, police and hospital officials said.
The attack happened at a police screening center in Ramadi, an insurgent
stronghold 70 miles west of Baghdad. At least 30 people were killed, said
Mohammed al-Ani, a doctor at Ramadi General Hospital and police Capt. Nassir
al-Alousi.
The attacks follows a heavy day of violence Wednesday, when at least 53
people were killed around Iraq, including 32 killed by a suicide bomber at a
Shiite funeral east of Baqouba.
Karbala has been relatively free of violence since December 2004, when seven
people were killed and 31 wounded in an attack. In March of that year
coordinated attacks from suicide bombers and preset explosions on Karbala's holy
sites killed more than 100.
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