BAGHDAD - A parked car exploded near a hospital in Baghdad's main Shiite
district on Saturday as a series of bombings killed at least 10 people and
wounded dozens in Iraq, police said.
A man and the coffin of a bombing victim are reflected in a
pool of bloodied water outside a morgue in Baghdad March 30, 2007.
[Reuters]
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The blast in Sadr City occurred
about 10:30 a.m. and was targeting street vendors and pedestrians near the
hospital. Police said at least five people were killed and 15 wounded.
Another parked car bomb struck a gas station an hour earlier in the Shiite
city of Hillah, killing at least two people and wounding 22, provincial police
said. The city, 60 miles south of Baghdad, has been the site of some of the
deadliest blasts since the war started four years ago, including a double
suicide bombing against a crowd of Shiite pilgrims that killed 120 people on
March 6.
In northern Iraq, a car exploded about 7 a.m. after the driver parked it near
Iraqis looking for work in the center of Tuz Khormato, 130 miles north of
Baghdad.
The driver and two workers were killed and 11 others wounded in the attack,
police Col. Abbas Mohammed Amin said. He said the driver intended to wait until
more workers had gathered before detonating the explosives but they went off
prematurely, preventing a higher casualty toll.