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Insurgents launch attacks in Baghdad
25 Feb 2007 10:07:08 GMT
Source: Reuters
Former Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi (L) talks to Iraq's Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi (C) and Adnan al-Dulaimi, leader of the Iraqi Accordance Front during a luncheon meeting in Baghdad, February 24, 2007. Picture taken February 24, 2007.
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Former Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi (L) talks to Iraq's Vice-President Tareq al-Hashemi (C) and Adnan al-Dulaimi, leader of the Iraqi Accordance Front during a luncheon meeting in Baghdad, February 24, 2007. Picture taken February 24, 2007.
REUTERS/HO
•  Iraq in turmoil

By Dean Yates

BAGHDAD, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Insurgents' defiance of efforts by U.S. and Iraqi forces to stabilise Baghdad persisted on Sunday with a series of car bombs and rocket attacks.

In a bold challenge to the security crackdown in the capital, regarded as a last chance to reverse Iraq's descent into civil war, gunmen had stormed an Iraqi police checkpoint near Baghdad airport on Saturday, killing eight policemen.

On Sunday, rockets and mortar bombs crashed into a market in a Shi'ite area in southern Baghdad and there were conflicting reports about casualties, police said.

One police source said 10 people were killed in the attack in the Abu Dsher area of Doura neighbourhood. Two other police sources said no more than three people had been wounded.

A car bomb killed one person and wounded four in central Baghdad, not far from the Iranian embassy, police said.

Police said the diplomatic mission did not appear to have been the target. The embassy compound was not damaged.

Another car bomb exploded along a commercial street in central Baghdad, in the Karrada district, sending a plume of black smoke into the air. One police source said four people were wounded while another said there were no casualties.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki expressed optimism on Saturday about the 10-day-old security plan and said U.S. and Iraqi forces had killed about 400 suspected militants since it began.

U.S. forces have set up joint security outposts with Iraqi forces around the city and the crackdown does appear to have reduced the number of bodies found tortured and shot in the city, apparent victims of death squads.

A typical daily body count had been around 40 or 50 a day in recent months but since the start of the plan it has been between five and 20. However, U.S. commanders say it will take months to judge the success of the offensive.

A fuel tanker rigged with explosives killed 45 people on Saturday when it blew up near a Sunni mosque in western Iraq, after the mosque's imam had criticised al Qaeda militants at Friday prayers, police and residents said.

The truck bomb in Habaniya, in the restive western province of Anbar, was unusual in targeting a Sunni Muslim mosque.

Some Sunni tribal leaders in Anbar are leading a campaign to fight al Qaeda, which is deeply entrenched in the province, and the attack signals an escalation of the power struggle in an area where U.S. troop reinforcements are soon to be deployed.

U.S. President George W. Bush is sending 21,500 extra troops to Iraq to help with the clampdown in Baghdad. Most are heading for the capital although 4,000 will be sent to Anbar, the most dangerous province in Iraq for American forces. (Additional reporting by Aseel Kami, Ibon Villelabeitia and Claudia Parsons)


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