Attacks surge in Iraq despite curfew (AP) Updated: 2006-02-25 22:09
When the mourners were returning later from the cemetery, a car bomb ripped
through an Iraqi military patrol that was escorting the mourners. At least two
soldiers and one police commando were killed in the mayhem, police and army
officials said. Six people, including civilians, were injured.
Two rockets exploded in the British Embassy compound in Baghdad's heavily
fortified Green Zone late Friday, causing minor injuries to two British workers,
the U.S. military reported.
Police have found dozens of bodies — many of them cuffed and shot — in
Baghdad and other areas since Wednesday's shrine bombing
The prime minister announced additional security measures Friday, including a
ban on vehicles entering or leaving Baghdad, more patrols in tense
neighborhoods, and a ban on carrying unauthorized weapons.
The government also extended the daytime curfew for a second day in Baghdad
and the flashpoint provinces of Babil, Diyala and Salaheddin, where the shrine
bombing took place. And the U.S. military said it would carry out additional
security patrols for another 48 hours.
The curfew prevented many from reaching mosques Friday, but people were
allowed to walk to neighborhood services, many of which were guarded by Iraqi
police and soldiers. Preachers at several leading mosques urged their followers
to maintain calm for the sake of the nation, and a number of demonstrations
called for Shiite-Sunni unity.
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