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Iraqis bury bomb victims
Baghdad -
Weeping relatives loaded simple wood coffins atop minivans Saturday
in Baghdad as the city buried dozens of victims of the deadliest
bombings since the U.S. flooded the capital with extra troops last
spring.
Iraqi officials raised the death
toll of Friday's attacks to at least 99 — including 62 people killed
at the central al-Ghazl market and 37 others killed about 20 minutes
later across town, at the New Baghdad area pigeon market. The Iraqi
police, hospital and Interior Ministry officials all spoke on
customary condition of anonymity.
At least 88 people were wounded in
al-Ghazl, and 56 others in the second blast, they said.
Two mentally disabled women
strapped with remote-control explosives — and possibly used as
unwitting suicide bombers — brought carnage to the two pet bazaars,
in attacks Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said sought to "turn
Baghdad back to the pre-surge period."
The so-called American troop surge
brought some 30,000 reinforcements to the Iraqi capital and its
surrounding belts, helping reduce violence dramatically. Friday's
pet market bombings were the city's largest attacks since the
buildup began.
"Terrorists have revealed how
morally degraded they are...and their hatred of humanity and all
Iraqis," al-Maliki said in a statement released by his office
Saturday.
Meanwhile, Iraqi forces raided two
villages north of the capital on Saturday, killing seven suspected
militants and arresting four others, police said. The U.S. military
also said its forces killed one suspected militant and detained 13
in two days of raids across northern and central Iraq.
Near Samarra, Iraqi police killed
four men and captured a senior aide to an al-Qaida in Iraq leader,
police said.
And near Tal Afar, Iraqi commandos
killed three wanted men and arrested three others, said Brig. Gen.
Ibrahim al-Jibouri, commander of Tal Afar police. Among those
captured was a top al-Qaida in Iraq figure, accused of organizing
militant operations in the western area of Mosul, al-Jibouri said.
Mosul — Iraq's third-largest city —
has become the next likely showdown with Sunni insurgents, who have
shifted to northern Iraq to escape U.S.-led offensives in and around
Baghdad and in Diyala province, northeast of the capital. Al-Qaida
in Iraq is believed to have a strong presence in Mosul.
Iraqi police and military units
have been dispatched to the Mosul area, and al-Maliki has suggested
they are gathering for a "decisive" attack on militants. The Iraqi
prime minister arrived in Mosul on Saturday to meet with field
commanders, his adviser Yassin Majeed said.
U.S. commanders in northern Iraq
have said the battle to oust al-Qaida in Iraq from its last urban
stronghold will not be a swift strike as al-Maliki suggested, but
rather a grinding campaign that will require more firepower from
both the Pentagon and Iraqi allies.
In Baghdad, the charred bodies of
Friday's bombing victims were laid under tarps outside a hospital
morgue. Weeping relatives knelt to claim them, lifting them into
coffins that were then strapped to minivans for transport to
cemeteries.
A teenage boy was curled up in the
back of a pickup truck, moaning over the coffin of a dead friend.
Police said many of the victims were young boys, who had been
wandering the cheerful pet market Friday on a day off of school for
a Muslim holy day.
Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi,
Iraq's chief military spokesman in Baghdad, said the female bombers
had Down syndrome and may not have known they were on suicide
missions. He said the bombs were detonated by remote control.
The tactic could reinforce U.S.
claims al-Qaida in Iraq may be increasingly desperate and running
short of able-bodied men willing or available for such missions.
But the bombings also served as a
reminder that Iraqi insurgents are constantly shifting their
strategies in attempts to unravel recent security gains around the
country. Women have been used in ever greater frequency in suicide
attacks — six times now since November. -- Associated
Press
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