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Nickdfresh
05-04-2005, 08:23 AM
Suicide bomber kills at least 47 in Iraq

Possible letter to al-Zarqawi cites low morale

Wednesday, May 4, 2005 Posted: 7:47 AM EDT (1147 GMT)
A man wounded in the suicide bombing in Erbil is rushed into a hospital.


BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN (http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/05/04/iraq.main/index.html)) -- A suicide bomber on Wednesday attacked a crowd of recruits seeking jobs with the Kurdish police force in Erbil, killing at least 47 people and wounding 100 others, officials said.

More than 300 people were at the recruitment center when the attack occurred, said Karim Zingari, Erbil's Interior Minister.

Bodies and the wounded were loaded into ambulances and pickup trucks. Dozens of people were rushed to hospitals.

The bomber was standing among the recruits when he set off his explosives, said an official with the Kurdish Democratic Party, whose headquarters is nearby.

Iraqi civilian Hawra Mohammed, 37, told The Associated Press he had just dropped his brother Ahmed, 32, off at the center at the time of the explosion.

Hawra said he raced back to find his brother lying in a street, bleeding and unconscious. But Ahmed soon began to move, AP reported.

"I lifted my brother onto my shoulders and took him to a nearby hospital," Hawra told AP. "The blood on my shirt is my brother's."

Hawra said that he nearly fainted at the sight of dead bodies and that many of the victims were unemployed, just like his brother, and wanted to earn money as policemen, according to AP.

Erbil is about 200 miles (322 km) north of Baghdad.

Insurgents have often targeted Iraqi security forces, including police and army recruits.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military said it has seized a letter from Iraqi insurgents believed to be intended for Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi complaining about low morale among followers and weakening support for the insurgency.

The authenticity of the letter -- which the military said American troops found Thursday in a raid in Baghdad -- could not be independently verified.

The letter -- which never refers to al-Zarqawi by name -- is written to Sheik Abu Ahmad, a name not known to be used by the militant leader or his followers. But supporters often call al-Zarqawi the Sheik or Sheik Abu Musab in letters and on Web sites.

"What has happened to myself and my brothers is an unforgivable crime, but God will punish the oppressor," the letter reads. "I swear by God that you will be asked about what happened to us because you have not asked about the situation of the migrants. Morale is down and there is fatigue among mujahedeen ranks.

"There is discrimination by some of the brethren emirs. God would not accept such actions, and a simple mistake delays victory, so what about big mistakes and gross guilts? Many underestimate them and are lenient toward them." (Full story)

Key posts under discussion

Shiite Arab leader Ibrahim al-Jaafari was sworn in Tuesday as the transitional prime minister for Iraq's first democratically elected government after Saddam Hussein's regime.

"On this historic day I would like to pay tribute to the Iraqi people because of this historic accomplishment," President Jalal Talabani said. Referring to the new officials, he said, "I think they are capable of this mission."

On Thursday, al-Jaafari announced 36 Cabinet positions in the new government -- some of them temporary. New Cabinet members were sworn in one by one Tuesday. In addition to al-Jaafari, 27 other officials took their oaths of office.

The full Iraqi government will not be in place Tuesday because key ministry posts remain under discussion. Among those ministries are oil, defense, electricity, human rights, and industry and minerals, which are in temporary hands, and two deputy prime ministries, which are unfilled. (Cabinet list)

It is unclear why two Sunni Arabs who had been chosen for the ministers of women affairs and provinces affairs were not sworn in.

Sunnis -- who dominated under Saddam -- did not turn out in significant numbers for the January 30 elections. But Iraqi politicians have been making efforts to bring them into the new government.

Other developments

* Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer appeared on Arabic-language satellite television Wednesday pleading for the release of Douglas Wood, an Australian who was kidnapped in Iraq. On Sunday, video was broadcast of Wood begging for his life surrounded by armed, masked militants. Prime Minister John Howard said Monday that his government will not follow insurgent demands to withdraw its troops from Iraq. (Full story)

* The chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff has issued a report to Congress saying military deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan could hamstring Washington's ability to fight other wars, a senior military official said. The official said the report concludes that future armed conflicts would last longer and produce higher casualties because of Iraq and Afghan deployments. (Full story)

* Separate roadside bomb attacks Tuesday killed two U.S. soldiers, a military statement said. The Task Force Baghdad Soldiers died when their vehicles were hit by improvised explosive devices. Since the start of the war, 1,591 U.S. military personnel have died in Iraq.

* Iraq Security Forces this week captured one of the sons of Saddam Hussein's half-brother, Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hasan al-Tikriti, in a raid north of Tikrit, a statement from the Iraqi government press office said. The government described Ayman Sabawi as "an active supporter of the terrorist insurgency," who along with his brothers "played a particularly active role in sustaining the terrorism by providing financial support, weapons and explosives to terrorist groups."

* U.S. Army Pfc. Lynndie England -- the reservist whose image symbolized the Abu Ghraib prison scandal in Iraq -- pleaded guilty Monday to charges related to the abuse at the Baghdad facility. The sentencing phase for England began Tuesday. (Full story)


CNN's Kevin Flower, Geoff Hiscock, Kathleen Koch, Octavia Nasr and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.
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Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.
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kentuckyklira
05-04-2005, 10:18 AM
Will they ever learn?

Don´t collaborate with terrorists!

DrMaddVibe
05-04-2005, 10:33 AM
Quick...send in the Germans!

kentuckyklira
05-04-2005, 11:12 AM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
Quick...send in the Germans! A few thousand of my countrymen are doing a pretty good job in Afghanistan!

And they aren´t even stealing any resources or raping the population!

DrMaddVibe
05-04-2005, 11:27 AM
Seems they learned their lesson from WWII then.

kentuckyklira
05-04-2005, 11:37 AM
Originally posted by DrMaddVibe
Seems they learned their lesson from WWII then. Too bad the USA apparently can´t learn from past mistakes!

Nickdfresh
05-05-2005, 08:57 PM
9:10 AM PDT, May 5, 2005

Insurgent Attacks Kill 22 in Baghdad

By Louise Roug, Times (http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-050505iraq_lat,0,7332221.story?coll=la-home-headlines) Staff Writer

BAGHDAD — In a series of early morning attacks around the city, 22 people were killed today, bringing the number of deaths to 91 in Iraq's bloodiest 24-period in more than two months.

The violence started Wednesday in the northern Kurdish city of Irbil when a suicide bomber killed 60 people in a crowd of job seekers outside a police recruitment center, according to U.S. and Iraq officials.

Twelve hours later, a car bomb exploded in Baghdad's Doura neighborhood, killing at least nine people and wounding 16. The U.S. military said that as many as 15 people were killed.

At 6 a.m. today, men carrying rifles fired on two patrol cars on a bridge in the capital, killing eight people and setting the cars ablaze, Iraqi officials said. Simultaneously at a different police checkpoint, gunmen killed two police officers and injured one.

At 7:15 a.m., an attacker blew himself up near the recruitment center at the closed Muthana airport, killing 11 Iraqi national guardsmen and injuring 15. A short while later, a car bomb exploded near the house of deputy interior minister of police affairs, Hikmat Musa Salman, killing one person and injuring six.

In a statement posted on a militant website, the radical group Ansar al Sunna claimed responsibility for the Irbil bombing. The building where the attack occurred also housed the local offices of the Kurdish Democratic Party. Ansar's statement said the attack was revenge for Kurdish cooperation with U.S. forces.

Streets were streaked with blood as more than 150 wounded people were taken by taxi and ambulance to hospitals.

"It's a slaughterhouse," said Jwan Abdul Qader, a 30-year-old nurse at Irbil's Rezgary Hospital as she and other staff members struggled to aid the wounded.

Overwhelmed by the number of casualties, the hospital called for blood donations. Mohammed Doyaa, a 25-year-old student, responded to the plea. "I can't understand why they did this," he said. "To gain what?"

The attacks began on the day after the first elected Iraqi government in generations was sworn in amid offers of reconciliation to Sunni Arab insurgents from Shiite Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari and speeches pledging ethnic and religious unity.

More than 200 people have been killed in insurgent attacks since the new Cabinet was announced a week ago.

Rosh Shawais, a deputy prime minister who is Kurdish, said the Irbil attack would only strengthen the relationship between the two main Kurdish parties, which control 75 of the 275 seats in the National Assembly.

Ansar al Sunna said the bombing had been carried out by car. The same group has also claimed responsibility for twin attacks in Irbil that killed more than 100 people in February 2004.

The violence Wednesday recalled those attacks, in which a pair of suicide bombers infiltrated holiday celebrations of the Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and blew themselves up in nearly simultaneous strikes. Several top members of the parties were killed.

The 2004 bombings stunned the parties' leaders, who have been staunch U.S. allies since the early 1990s and strongly supported the invasion to oust Saddam Hussein.

Since the twin attacks, Irbil — about 200 miles north of Baghdad — had been relatively quiet.

Sangar Ahmad, 22, said he had been standing in line with his brother and other prospective recruits but couldn't remember the explosion.

"I woke up here in the hospital," said Ahmad. As for his brother, he said, "I do not know whether he is alive or dead."

"This is a crime," said Hogher Ghareeb, a 28-year-old lawyer. "But the will of the people is stronger than the terrorists."

"This is horrible!" said 25-year-old Abdul Qader Kheder, a student who was at the scene. "The one who did this is not a human being."

The estimates of casualties varied, with some Iraqi officials putting the death toll closer to 70. It was by far the deadliest single attack in the country since Feb. 28, when a car bomber drove into a crowd of Iraqi police and army recruits awaiting medical examinations in Hillah, killing about 125 people and wounding more than 140.

Militants frequently target recruits and security forces, who are seen as vital to the Iraq government's plan to stabilize the country.

As of Monday, at least 616 Iraqi police had been killed this year, according to statistics compiled by the Brookings Institution in Washington.

At the swearing-in ceremony Tuesday, Jafari appealed for Iraq's fractious religious and ethnic groups to unite.

"It is true that every minister belongs to a specific background and there are multiple loyalties for each minister according to religion, sect, nationality, specialty and region," Jafari said. "But the ministries will have one aim: The government will be Iraqi and its doors will always be open to Iraqis."

But the three top Sunni politicians, including Vice President Ghazi Ajil Yawer, boycotted the event, embarrassing the new government and reinforcing a belief here that the once powerful Sunni Arab minority that prospered under Hussein's rule now feels marginalized.

The government has until mid-August to draft a constitution, and until December to prepare Iraq for parliamentary elections, but perhaps the greatest challenge will be integrating Sunni Arabs into the political process. Shiites, believed to make up about 60% of the population, have a small majority in the assembly.

Times correspondent Abdul Salam Medeni in Irbil contributed to this report.