Car bombs kill at least 41 in Baghdad Shiite area

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Car bombs kill at least 41 in Baghdad Shiite area stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

KIM GAMEL | April 29, 2009 04:13 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »
I Like ItI Don’t Like It
People gather around the wreckage of a car destroyed in a car bomb explosion in Baghdad's Shiite enclave of Sadr City, Iraq, Wednesday, April 29, 2009. Two car bombs exploded near a restaurant in Baghdad's main Shiite district on Wednesday, killing at least 17 people, and wounding scores, Iraqi police said. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim)

BAGHDAD — Twin car bombs ravaged a popular shopping area in Baghdad's biggest Shiite district Wednesday, killing at least 41 people in another powerful strike by suspected Sunni insurgents seeking a return to sectarian chaos.

In less than a week, blasts have struck the heart of Shiite traditions and unity: hitting Shiite pilgrims, a revered shrine and now teeming Sadr City in attacks that have claimed nearly 200 lives.

The once-powerful Shiite militias have so far largely held back from retaliations _ and reopening memories of the back-and-forth bloodshed from Iraq's 2006-7 sectarian slaughters.

But anger was seething in the Sadr City slums.

Scowling young men _ joined by women shrouded in black _ gathered around the bloodstained pavement and the twisted hulks of the cars, which had been parked about 100 yards apart near a restaurant and an ice cream stand.

Protesters later threw stones and empty soda cans at a vehicle carrying Iraqi soldiers, who they claim failed to protect them despite a security cordon around the district. Soldiers shot into the air to disperse the crowd.

It was the deadliest bombing attack inside sprawling Sadr City since U.S.-backed Iraqi forces seized control of the area in late May. The offensive broke the hold of the feared Mahdi Army, a network of Shiite militiamen loyal to anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

"Sadr City should be secure. We are a poor people and we want to live safely," complained 47-year-old laborer Mohammed Abbas. "How could these bombers have entered Sadr City?"

Story continues below
advertisement

The explosions went off in quick succession, tearing through a crowded outdoor market where vendors peddle everything from bicycles and motorcycle parts to birds and small pets.

Saadi Rashid, 35, said he had just bought some new clothes for his children when the blast went off, sending shrapnel piercing through his shoulder and his leg.

"I saw my blood covering the clothes that I had planned to take to my kids," he said from his hospital bed. "What a disaster. I suddenly couldn't bear to walk or even stand."

Officers said they found another explosives-laden car parked nearby in Sadr City and detonated it without incident. Six other potential car bombs also were found elsewhere in the capital, including three more in Sadr City, according to the Iraqi military.

Another parked car bomb apparently targeting an Iraqi army patrol exploded hours later in the northern Shiite stronghold of Hurriyah, killing two people and wounding eight others, police said.

The increase in high-profile attacks in recent weeks has brought questions about the ability of Iraq's forces to hold security gains. The U.S. military has begun pulling back from small outposts in the cities as a step toward full withdrawal from urban areas by the end of June and from the entire country by the end of 2011.

In all, at least 432 people, including 80 Iranian pilgrims, have been killed in violence so far this month, compared with 335 people in March, 283 in February and 242 in January, according to an Associated Press tally.

The latest violence also serves to embarrass the Iraqi government following its claims of capturing the alleged leader of an al-Qaida in Iraq front group. On Tuesday, the Iraqi military presented the first image of the man it says is Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, saying his arrest would deal a major blow to the insurgency.

The Iraqi military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, blamed the attacks on followers of al-Baghdadi, saying "absolutely it is a message of reprisal by these terrorist gangs."

The U.S. military, however, believes Sunni insurgents are merely trying to provoke the kind of sectarian violence that nearly brought full-scale civil war in 2006 and 2007.

"They are very emotionally charged targets. They are meant to go after a vulnerable aspect of society, to just literally kill as many innocent civilians as they randomly can," Maj. Gen. David Perkins told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Perkins insisted the insurgents are now unable to carry out such attacks on a daily basis.

"We have seen a couple of recent high-profile attacks, which obviously are a concern. But we don't think that's a fundamental shift," he said.

There were conflicting death tolls for Sadr City on Wednesday, as is usual in the chaotic aftermath of bombings.

Police and hospital officials said 41 people died and more than 60 were wounded. An Interior Ministry official gave a slightly higher figure, 45 deaths.

The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't allowed to release the information.

Nobody claimed responsibility for the attack, but car bombs and suicide attacks bear the hallmark of al-Qaida in Iraq and other insurgent groups.

Meanwhile, a roadside bomb struck a minibus in a Sunni area in southern Baghdad, killing at least five people and wounding three, according to police and hospital officials.

Tensions also rose near the northern disputed city of Kirkuk when U.S. troops opened fire after being ambushed by a grenade and small-arms fire while distributing micro-grants to Iraqi businesses.

Iraqi officials said two civilians were killed when the Americans returned fire, but the U.S. military said those killed were enemy fighters.

Iraqi government has expressed anger over a deadly U.S. raid Sunday in southern Iraq that it says violated its security agreement with Washington.

___

Associated Press Writers Chelsea J. Carter and Mazin Yahya in Baghdad and the AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this report.

BAGHDAD — Twin car bombs ravaged a popular shopping area in Baghdad's biggest Shiite district Wednesday, killing at least 41 people in another powerful strike by suspected Sunni insurgents seeki...
BAGHDAD — Twin car bombs ravaged a popular shopping area in Baghdad's biggest Shiite district Wednesday, killing at least 41 people in another powerful strike by suspected Sunni insurgents seeki...
Loading...
 
Filed by Katharine Zaleski
 
Comments
43
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
- danielet I'm a Fan of danielet 18 fans permalink

so much for the Petraeus "victory" surge. Seeing that we are leaving, the Sunnis we bought off from insurgency are now preparing for the civil war to come by intimidating Shia civilians with bombs, supported by Sunni Saudi Arabia and Kuwait as was the original insurgency. Bush made a deal in 2001 with Iran for a Shia takeover of Iraq. But when Iran saw the insurgency that America's ally Sunni countries were supporting, it went all out unleaching the Badr Corps it controls. Sadr was the only nationalist that would bring Shias and Sunnis together as Arabs. But the US didn't want that so we polarized Sadr by trying to kill him and decimate his forces. Now he is stuck in Iran's camp. Led by stupid generals and a criminally incompetend Commander-in-Chief, we repeated all the what-not-to-do lessons we learned in Vietnam. Our spinelss UN-decider president only wanted to hold out long enough so the War on Terror becomes "Obama's War," blamed for the outcome. Like an ICU physician, Obama was given the impossible task of saving patients that criminally incompetent physicians brought to death's door on the regular wards. Obama should note the fools he has incommand and just get out before it is all blamed on him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:10 PM on 04/29/2009
- zaz33 I'm a Fan of zaz33 32 fans permalink

As I understand it, bombings are not investigated. That means anyone can take credit and anyone can be blamed.

Car, and stationary bombs targeting civilians always make me suspicious.

Who benefits ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 04/29/2009
- Nyland8 I'm a Fan of Nyland8 90 fans permalink
photo

Any exit strategy that’s dependent upon events on the ground in Iraq would be a failure from the start. Our occupation in Iraq cannot and should not be tied – in any way – to levels of violence exhibited throughout that country. If it is, then our withdrawal is NOT in our own hands. If it is, then it means that other forces, other countries, other interests are dictating what America can and cannot do – and that is unacceptable.

Our invasion and occupation of Iraq was a misguided foreign policy, undertaken by a misguided administration. Now, with saner minds at the helm, we must implement a policy of reasoned withdrawal that is NOT contingent upon any events on the ground.

Or should we, as Americans, abdicate control of our own military to foreign interests?

No patriot would think so.

8

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 04/29/2009
- whatthel I'm a Fan of whatthel 274 fans permalink
photo

We can't police the entire world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 04/29/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
photo

Obama's Rock and Hard Place...

He's stuck right in between. He doesn't want to allow what everyone knows will happen to the average Iraqis with no US troops to stand between the Shiite and Sunni militias and no millions in US cash paid out to keep them 'peaceful'. They'll be caught in the cross fire even more than ever before. I have no doubt that much of the money the Bush administration paid out was put to use buying more and better weapons, ammo and explosives. Remember no militiaman ever turned in much in the way of weaponry despite several years of trying to get them to disarm.

In the mean time the Kurds are quietly buying time while sitting on the huge oil fields they gained control of during the invasion. As soon as civil war breaks out they will use the opportunity to declare their own country. This may drive Turkey who has already had problems with Kurdish terrorists crossing from Iraq to raid in southern Turkey to invade northern Iraq.

In short immediate withdrawal of US troops and money will result in a blood bath.
That is the rock.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 04/29/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
photo

Now the hard place...

We already now that our continued occupation of Iraq has resulted in uncounted deaths of Iraqis as well as thousands of our own troops and a serious drain on our economy and our military. Our stature and leadership in the world has been destroyed and even our supposed 'friends' in Israel have used Iraq for their own gains. We also gave up any moral high ground we had in condemning Putin's excesses in Eastern Europe.

Also added is the continued strengthening of AQ and the Taliban in the region which has now spilled over from Afghanistan into Pakistan. If the extremists in Pakistan gain control of the country's nukes the Middle East will burn as Israel or India will probably launch a preemptive strike possibly with their own nukes. In this scenario I can't say I blame them.

This is a condensed version since the possibilities are too many to mention here. All of them are ugly.

Both the peacenicks and the GOP drones would be well to consider these things before opening their mouths.

The real workable solutions of keeping Saddam contained or dividing up Iraq into 3 countries are long gone. There is no good solution and we all know who ignored these possibilities when they made the decision to abandon the justifiable fight in Afghanistan and invade Iraq.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 04/29/2009
- Stilts9 I'm a Fan of Stilts9 50 fans permalink
photo

The Bush/Cheney legacy lives on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 04/29/2009
- TJCole I'm a Fan of TJCole 167 fans permalink
photo

We fought the wrong war, for the wrong reasons, for the wrong people...!

Oops, our bad.....sorry...!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 04/29/2009
- oldGunny I'm a Fan of oldGunny 3 fans permalink
photo

50+ years later, we are still in Japan, Germany and S Korea...

We are not going anywhere anytime soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 PM on 04/29/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
photo

No body in those countries are trying to kill our soldiers. In Iraq it's the opposite. Everyone wants to kill an American

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 04/29/2009
- hillvoter I'm a Fan of hillvoter 7 fans permalink

Obama is likely to turn Iraq into something like Kennedy's Vietnam.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:11 PM on 04/29/2009
- 2626Jump I'm a Fan of 2626Jump 33 fans permalink

or Pol Pots Vietnam.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 04/29/2009
- JerryLevy I'm a Fan of JerryLevy 54 fans permalink
photo

Thank you, none on the left like to remember that after the fascist Americans left Vietnam, the winners proceeded to execute an estimated 1 million people over the next few years. In fact, the boat people, estimated in the millions did not want to leave Vietnam until the new regime took over. Wonder why?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 04/29/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
photo

That possibility began the second we invaded. Last time I checked Obama wasn't president then.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 04/29/2009
- JoeBlough I'm a Fan of JoeBlough 61 fans permalink
photo

It makes no sense why we are spinning our wheels in Iraq. Sure we invaded a non-theatening country, but that was on the last guy's watch. It's time to cut our loses and come home. The country will remain in chaos with or without us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 04/29/2009
- hillvoter I'm a Fan of hillvoter 7 fans permalink

Get the troops out now. With Obama in the white house we are sure to snatch defeat from the arms of victory. Get the troops out of Afghanistan too. As long as we do not support their mission they will fail. I will never support troops engaging on foreign soil again because America is full of spineless creeps.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 04/29/2009
- 2626Jump I'm a Fan of 2626Jump 33 fans permalink

there is some truth to that!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 04/29/2009
- GlenRast I'm a Fan of GlenRast 34 fans permalink
photo

What victory was that? The dumb rant that we've somehow 'won' in Iraq is old and tired.

You don't 'win' a war by paying the people fighting millions not to fight. That's all the surge was.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 04/29/2009
- cactusgal I'm a Fan of cactusgal 122 fans permalink

The "spineless creeps" you refer to just spent 8 years in the White House. Besides, didn't they say Mission Accomplished?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 04/29/2009
- 2626Jump I'm a Fan of 2626Jump 33 fans permalink

The numbers of dead are adding up under this careless president.
I wonder how many had medical issues with the white house's 380k fly by? Apparently............. people do still care about that kind of thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 04/29/2009
- shanester I'm a Fan of shanester 15 fans permalink
photo

This won't end well nobody what Obama tries to do

Why prolong the inevitable. Get the troops out and let the chips fall where they may

This disaster started in March 2003 when Bush decided to invade I-RAK becasue he had "daddy issues"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 04/29/2009
photo

Now that we are there we should not leave until we leave some form of government that at least remotely resembles that which we went their for in the first place. If we went just to take out Saddam we would be home long ago but that is not the objective. Secondly, the muslim interfaith massacres against each other would be unbelievable. This does not take into consideration the Kurds which would be run over like a steam roller. At present leaving would be far worse than staying until we can help nuture the present government to a point where it can stand on its feet when we leave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 04/29/2009
- lippp I'm a Fan of lippp 17 fans permalink

What you say may be true. But at 10 billion dollars a month can we continue? And if keeping the peace is so crucial, why aren't our allies helping with the occupation and cost? Finally, the sectarian violence will continue no matter what. I don't see how we can resolve the conflict between the factions. Simply occupying the country with our troops is not solving the problem. Tragically, perhaps the only solution is to let Kurds, Shites and Sunnis resolve the issues amongst themselves. Maybe the best we can do is to alert Iragis we are leaving and giving those that want to leave the means to safely do so. While that may be very bloody and violent, what other options do we have? Remember this was the neo cons war. If only we could tax everyone of them to keep our troops there. That it seems is the only fair thing to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 04/29/2009
photo

Yep. You have a strong point. I still can not believe with all the resources and power that we have that we can do something some unbelievably stupid as to start this to begin with, without having had the present scenario on the blackboard to indicate how dangerous this operation could be and is. All the reasons I outlined above were known then...what in the world were they thinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 04/29/2009
- shanester I'm a Fan of shanester 15 fans permalink
photo

Whomever takes over eventually will be just as brutal a leader as Saddam was. That's the irony off all ironies

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 04/29/2009
- 2626Jump I'm a Fan of 2626Jump 33 fans permalink

you discount "Change and Hope"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 04/29/2009
- rwext I'm a Fan of rwext 8 fans permalink

another 100 days Obama accomplishment to tout

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 04/29/2009
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect