String of Baghdad bomb blasts kills 16

(AP)
Updated: 2006-10-04 20:48

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A series of bombs exploded in rapid succession in a shopping district in a mainly Christian neighborhood of Baghdad on Wednesday, killing 16 people and wounding 87, police said.

Scattered attacks around Iraq killed five other people, and the U.S. military announced the death of two soldiers ¡ª raising the toll of one of the deadliest periods for American troops this year.

At least 17 troops have been killed in combat since Saturday, including eight U.S. soldiers who died in gunbattles and bomb blasts Monday in Baghdad - the most killed in a single day in the capital since July 2005.

An intensified U.S.-Iraqi military sweep launched in Baghdad in August has been clearing neighborhoods house by house of weapons, militiamen and insurgents.

Despite the sweep, the capital continues to see a deadly combination of attacks by Sunni insurgents and tit-for-tat killings and bombings by Shiite militias and Sunni groups, which have killed thousands this month.

Just before noon, a car bomb and two roadside bombs blew up within 10 minutes in a shopping district of the Camp Sara neighborhood, which is predominantly Christian, 1st Lt. Ali Abbas said.

The blasts left 16 dead and wounded 87, including shoppers and 15 policemen, destroying cars and collapsing part of a nearby building, he said.

Bodies lay in the street next to the smoking wreckage of burning cars. Rescue workers piled corpses into an ambulance parked next to the crumbled facade of a building, while a policeman warned residents to leave the area for fear more bombs would explode.

An increasingly common insurgent tactic is to detonate one bomb to draw rescue workers and onlookers, then to explode a second device to cause mass casualties.

One witness, who identified himself only by his first name, Hamdi, said a roadside bomb went off first and people started to gather, then the second blast went off.

"Then more people gathered and they were searching for their dead or missing relatives when the car bomb exploded," he told AP Television News at the scene. "Everybody knows this is a Christian neighborhood, they are neither Sunnis or Shiites, so why are they doing this them?"

The military announced that one soldier was killed a day earlier in a shooting in Baghdad, while a second died Tuesday from gunfire in the northern city of Kirkuk.

Earlier in the nearby New Baghdad area, a bomb blast hit a convoy carrying the Iraqi industry minister. Three police guards were killed and nine others wounded, but the minister was not harmed, Abbas said.

Meanwhile, in Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, gunmen attacked a police patrol, killing two policemen and injuring eight people, including six policemen, Diyala province police said.
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