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Woman bomber kills 41 at Baghdad
college
Baghdad -
A female suicide bomber triggered a ball bearing-packed
charge Sunday, killing at least 41 people at a mostly Shiite college
whose main gate was left littered with blood-soaked student
notebooks and papers amid the bodies.
On Monday, a parked car bomb
exploded near a building where the Iraqi vice president was
attending a conference, killing at least 10 civilians and injuring
18. The Iraqi leader was not hurt.
Adel Abdel-Mahdi, a Shiite and one
of the two Iraqi vice presidents, was not in danger, according to an
aide who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to brief media. Police said at least 10 people were
killed in the blast.
The conference, which included
municipal and public works officials, was in the upscale Mansour
neighborhood that houses many embassies and has been the scene of
kidnappings blamed on militants.
Iraqi's other vice president is
Tariq al-Hashemi, a Sunni.
Meanwhile, witnesses said a woman
carried out the attack at the business school annex to Mustansiriyah
University. Interior Ministry officials said they were still
investigating those reports. The school's main campus was hit by a
string of bombings last month that killed 70 people.
The attack came as the powerful
Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr said an ongoing security
crackdown in Baghdad was doomed to fail because of U.S. involvement
and suggested he was rethinking his cooperation. He bitterly
complained that "car bombs continue to explode" in the capital
despite the new security push.
The political situation in Iraq was
further thrown into question after President Jalal Talabani, a
73-year-old Kurd, was taken to Jordan for medical tests after
feeling ill. Talabani's son, Qubad Talabani, said his father was
suffering from fatigue and exhaustion. "He did not have a heart
attack" or a stroke, he told CNN.
The statement issued in the name of
the radical cleric al-Sadr put increased strains on the U.S.-Iraqi
security sweeps aimed at restoring order in the capital.
Al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia pulled
its fighters off the streets under intense government pressure to
let the 12-day-old security plan proceed. But a relentless wave of
Sunni attacks — six alone in the Baghdad area Sunday — has
apparently tested the patience of al-Sadr as well as many ordinary
Shiites.
A return to the streets by the
Mahdi Army forces could effectively block the security effort and
raise the chances of Baghdad falling into sectarian street battles —
the apparent aim of Sunni extremists seeking any way to destroy the
U.S.-backed government.
"Here we are, watching car bombs
continue to explode to harvest thousands of innocent lives from our
beloved people in the middle of a security plan controlled by an
occupier," said a statement read to hundreds of cheering supporters
by an al-Sadr aide in Baghdad.
The cleric was highly critical of
the U.S. role and urged leaders to "make your own Iraqi (security)
plans." He said "no security plan will work" with direct U.S.
involvement.
Al-Sadr — who has not appeared in
public in more than a month — is no friend of Washington and his
forces fought fierce battles with U.S. troops in 2004. But he has
largely cooperated in the Iraqi political process to avoid strains
with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and the Shiite leadership.
The statement was the first public
word from al-Sadr since U.S. assertions earlier this month that he
fled to neighboring Iran to avoid arrest. Al-Sadr's aides and other
loyalists insist he never left Iraq.
Shiite anger at the United States
is running high since American soldiers on Friday detained the son
of the most powerful Shiite political leader for nearly 12 hours
after he crossed from Iran. U.S. officials claim Shiite groups,
including the Mahdi Army, receive weapons and aid from Iran. Iran
denies the charges.
"To my Shiite and Sunni brothers, I
say, `Let us scorn sectarianism and hoist the banner of unity,'"
said the statement from al-Sadr, whose militia is blamed for
frequent execution-style slayings of Sunni rivals.
Since the security crackdown began,
the number of bodies thought to be victims of Shiite death squads
has gone down dramatically in Baghdad, but there has been no respite
from violence blamed on Sunni insurgents.
In other developments, Talabani's
office said he had fallen ill due to "continuing hard work over the
past few days."
A doctor said Talabani was being
treated at the heart center at King Hussein Medical City in Amman
because the facility has modern equipment, not necessarily because
the president suffers from a heart ailment.
The president's son said he was "up
and about" and able to communicate.
Under Iraq's constitution, the
president serves as the country's titular head of state. The prime
minister runs the government.
Besides the college blast, at least
18 people were killed — mostly in Shiite districts — in bombings and
rocket attacks in the Baghdad area.
Security guards at the
Mustansiriyah University annex scuffled with the bomber before the
blast, witnesses said. Most of the victims were students, including
at least 46 injured, said police
Suicide bombings by women are
unusual but not unprecedented in Iraq's chaos. The main campus at
Mustansiriyah, about 1 1/2 miles away, was the target of twin car
bombs and a suicide blast last month that killed 70 people.
The students at the business
college were returning to midterm exams after the Iraqi weekend.
A 22-year-old student, Muhanad
Nasir, said he saw a commotion at the gate.
"Then there was an explosion. I did
not feel anything for 15 minutes and when I returned to
consciousness, I found myself in the hospital," said Nasir, who was
wounded in the head and chest.
The blast flung blood-soaked
notebooks and backpacks among the lifeless bodies and wounded.
Cement walls were pockmarked by the hail of ball bearings. Parents
rushed to the site and some collapsed in tears after learning their
children were killed or injured. Students used rags and towels to
try to mop up the blood.
The school is located in a mostly
Shiite district of northeast Baghdad, but does not limit enrollment
to that group.
In the northern city of Mosul, U.S.
troops killed two gunmen in a raid and captured a suspected local
leader of the insurgent group al-Qaida in Iraq, the military said.
Additional details were not immediately available.
Iraq's Interior Ministry,
meanwhile, raised the toll from a suicide truck bombing in the
violence-wracked Anbar province on Saturday to 52 dead and 74
injured.
The attack on worshippers leaving a
mosque in Habbaniyah, about 50 miles west of Baghdad, was believed
linked to escalating internal Sunni battles between insurgents and
those who oppose them.
"This cowardly act of violence
underscores that the terrorists are the enemies of all Iraqis,
regardless of sect," the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad,
said in a statement. "They want Iraq to fail. Now is the time for
the Iraqis to come together against these terrorists." -- Associated
Press
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