Bombings across Iraq killed at least
35 people in attacks that appeared to be revenge for an assault on a Sunni
mosque that has deepened sectarian conflict.
A bomb also exploded in the northern
city of Arbil on Saturday, a rare attack unsettling the relative stability the
capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region has enjoyed.
Local television footage showed
firefighters dousing the charred remains of a car in Arbil. A Reuters
journalist earlier saw a cloud of smoke, but the source was not clear.
In Baghdad, a bomber rammed a
vehicle into an intelligence headquarters, killing at least eight people,
police and medical sources said. Near Tikrit, a suicide bomber driving a
military Humvee packed with explosives attacked a gathering of soldiers and
Shi’ite militias overnight, killing nine.
Shi’ite militiamen machinegunned 68
worshipers at a village mosque in Diyala Province on Friday as politicians try
to form a power-sharing government capable of countering Islamic State
militants.
An advance by Islamic State through
northern Iraq has alarmed the Baghdad government and
its Western allies and drawn U.S. airstrikes in Iraq for the first time since
the withdrawal of American troops in 2011.
Although the air campaign has caused
a few setbacks for Islamic State, they do not address the far broader problem
of sectarian warfare which the group has fueled with attacks on Shi’ites.
Bombings, kidnappings and
execution-style shootings occur almost daily, echoing the dark days of
2006-2007, the peak of a sectarian civil war.
In addition to the Arbil attack,
three bombings that appeared to target Kurdish forces killed 18 people in the
city of Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, security sources said.
Islamic State routed Kurdish forces
in its latest advance through the north.
Two of Iraq’s most influential Sunni
politicians suspended participation in talks on forming a new government after
the militiamen carried out the mosque attack.
Deputy Prime Minister Saleh Mutlaq
and Parliament Speaker Salim al-Jibouri have pulled out of talks with the main
Shi’ite alliance until the results of an investigation into the killings are
announced.
Jibouri, a moderate Sunni, condemned
both Islamic State as well as the Iranian-trained Shi’ite militias who Sunnis
say kidnap and kill members of their sect with impunity.
“We will not allow them to exploit
disturbed security in the country to undermine the political process. We
believe the political process should move on,” he told a news conference on
Saturday.
Iraq’s new Shi’ite prime minister,
Haider al-Abadi, faces the task of trying to draw Sunnis into politics after
they were sidelined by his predecessor Nuri al-Maliki.
Maliki stepped aside after pressure
from Sunnis, Kurds, some fellow Shi’ites, Iran and the United States.
Iran, a regional power broker with deep influence
in Iraq, is sending its foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, to Baghdad on
Sunday for talks with Iraqi officials.
(ARBIL, Iraq)
(Reuters)
Bombs Kill At Least 35 Across Iraq A Day After Mosque Shooting
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Rating:

No comments: