BAGHDAD - Two car bombs exploded near the Iranian Embassy in Baghdad on
Tuesday, police said, and a Sunni Arab insurgent group claimed responsibility
for a similar attack the day before.
Iraqi police and a US soldier inspect the wreckage after a
car bomb blast in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, April 23, 2007. [AP]
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Tuesday's two car bombs exploded
within two minutes of each other at about 10 a.m. in a public parking lot
located about 150 yards from the front of the Iranian Embassy, wounding six
civilians but causing no damage to the embassy or its guards, a police officer
said on condition of anonymity out of concern for his own security.
On Monday, two parked car bombs exploded outside the embassy in Karradah
Mariam, an area of Baghdad that is about 200 yards from the heavily guarded
Green Zone, where the Iraqi government and the US and British embassies operate.
One bomb exploded near the same public parking lot at about noon, killing one
civilian and wounding another. At 4:30 p.m., the other parked car bomb exploded
close to a police patrol near the Iranian Embassy, killing one civilian and
wounding two officers, police said.
On Tuesday, the prominent Iraqi Sunni insurgent group Islamic Ansar al-Sunnah
issued a statement on its Web site claiming responsibility for Monday's bombing
near the parking lot.
"Despite the failed and filthy security plan which is being carried by
crusaders and renegades against Muslims in this country, your brother mujahedeen
are determined to continue this long road," the group said.
It said the attack targeted a parking lot used by Iraqi "renegades who work
at the Green Zone."
US officials have accused Iran, a mostly Shiite country, of training and
arming Shiite militiamen in Iraq, fueling the country's sectarian war. Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, leader of Iraq's Shiite-majority government,
recently said efforts are under way to try to release five Iranians who were
captured by US forces on Jan. 11 in the city of Irbil in Kurdish-controlled
northern Iraq.
US authorities have said the five detained Iranians included the operations
chief and other members of Iran's elite Quds Force, which is accused of arming
and training Iraqi militants.