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Suicide Bomber Kills at least 15
at Iraq
Pakistan
Times
Monitoring Report
IRBIL (Iraq): A suicide car
bomber killed at least
15
traffic police and wounded about 100 more Monday outside the unit's
headquarters in the northern Kurdish city of Irbil, police and hospital
officials said.
Iraq's insurgency appeared unfazed by two massive U.S.-Iraqi military
offensives against militant smuggling routes and training centers west and
north of Baghdad, mounting attacks that have killed at least 73 in the past
two days — including 28 people Monday.
A roadside bomb also killed a U.S. soldier on patrol near Tal Afar, 90 miles
east of the Syrian border, the military said. The soldier belonged to the
1st Corps Support Command and was not part of the two major offensives
taking part in the western Anbar province.
Militants, meanwhile, caimed in a Web posting that they killed a foreign
contractor working for a U.S. company along with six of his Iraqi guards in
an ambush west of Baghdad.
The bomber in Irbil wore a police uniform and slammed his car into a
gathering of some 200 traffic police during roll call in a courtyard behind
the headquarters Monday morning, police Lt. Sulaiman Mohammed said.
Dr. Mohammed Ali of Irbil General Hospital revised his earlier count of 20
dead to 13, saying he miscounted bodies amid the confusion. Massive car
bombs usually scatter body parts over wide areas and emergency services
often miscount them.
Dr. Tahseen Hassan reported that Irbil Teaching Hospital received one body
from the blast. Another injured man died at yet another hospital.
Perspective
The attack occurred on a main street that leads to the oil-rich northern
city of Kirkuk, which is south of Irbil, police said.
Irbil, one of two major cities in Iraq's Kurdish region, has enjoyed
autonomous rule under Western protection since 1991. The area has been
largely sheltered from the violence in the rest of Iraq but has seen several
major bombings blamed on militant Muslim groups.
On Sunday, a suicide bomber walked into a crowded Baghdad kebab restaurant
near the heavily fortified main gate of U.S. and Iraqi government
headquarters at the Green Zone, killing at least 23 people, including
policemen — the deadliest attack in the capital in just over six weeks.
A total of 45 people were killed in insurgent assaults throughout the
country Sunday.
Most of the suicide attackers are thought to belong to extremist groups like
al-Qaida in Iraq, which has authorized members to kill other Muslims,
including women and children, in their quest to destabilize the Shiite-led
government of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
The rate of insurgent attacks has risen dramatically since al-Jaafari
announced his Cabinet on April 28. At least 1,180 people have been killed
since then.
Some extremists also have started threatening fellow Sunni Arabs, who make
up the insurgency's core, because some leaders of the minority Muslim sect
have expressed a readiness to join the political process. Most Sunnis
boycotted January's historic election.
Convey Attacked
In the Internet claim, the militant group Ansar al-Sunnah Army said its
fighters attacked a convoy leaving a base near the town of Ramadi, killing
the seven men and capturing two other Iraqi guards. The statement did not
say when the attack took place.
The claim could not be confirmed. The statement, posted on a Web forum often
used by Ansar al-Sunnah and other militant groups, included pictures of the
contractor's identification cards.
The cards identified him as Binkumar Gurung, working for the American-Iraq
Solution Group, contracted by the Pentagon to do work in Iraq. The cards
included a license to carry weapons.
The statement said the contractor was Japanese, but no passport was included
and his picture and name appeared to be South Asian. One of the cards also
gave his name as "Gurung Bilprasad, alias Binkumar."
On Monday, Sunni Arabs were expected to name their representatives to a
committee that has less than two months before the mid-August deadline to
draft Iraq's new constitution. The number of Sunni members took weeks to
negotiate with the Shiite majority.
Other Episodes
Elsewhere, a band of insurgents launched a bold assault on a Baghdad police
station killing eight policemen and an 8-month-old baby early Monday, police
said. At least 23 were wounded.
The attack on the Baya police station in southwestern Baghdad began just
before dawn and included two car suicide bombs, mortars, rocket-propelled
grenades and small arms fire, police Capt. Talib Thamir said.
Gunmen killed three members of the Kurdish Peshmerga militia Monday near a
camp in the town of Hit, 85 miles west of Baghdad, Dr. Muhanad Jawad said
from the capital, where the bodies were brought.
At least one American has died since the new military campaigns — code-named
Spear and Dagger — began Friday and Saturday, respectively, in Anbar
province. About 1,000 U.S. and Iraqi forces are taking part in each
offensive.
At least 1,721 members of the U.S. military have died since the Iraq war
started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
Operations Spear and Dagger are aimed at destroying militant networks near
the Syrian border and north of Baghdad, the military said. About 60
insurgents have been killed and 100 captured.
Troops on the ground said they found foreign passports and one roundtrip air
ticket from Tripoli, in Libya, to Damascus, Syria. They found two passports
from Sudan, two from Saudi Arabia, two from Libya, two from Algeria and one
from Tunisia.
Intelligence officials believe Anbar province is a portal for extremist
groups, including Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al-Qaida in Iraq, to smuggle in
foreign fighters. Syria is under intense pressure from Washington and
Baghdad to tighten control of its porous 380-mile border with Iraq.
Operation Spear appeared to be winding down and U.S. Marines reported
finding a weapons cache in the town of Karabilah early Monday, including two
dozen RPG launchers, heavy machine guns and equipment to make up to 25
bombs.
The dusty town is about 200 miles west of Baghdad and near Qaim, on the
Syrian border.
Troops also found a large number of explosives in the building and conducted
a controlled blast, leveling an entire block, according to an AP reporter in
the town. Many residents had already left their homes for safer areas and
portions of the town have been reduced to rubble.
U.S. Marines reported killing 15 insurgents Sunday in battles near Fallujah,
the Anbar province town 40 miles west of Baghdad and a perennial insurgent
stronghold.●
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