Iraqi official escapes roadside bomb blast
Thursday, August 24, 2006 The blast killed two bystanders, including a 12-year-old. BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Iraq's interior minister narrowly escaped a roadside bomb blast Wednesday in a mainly Sunni part of the capital that U.S. officials had said had been virtually cleared of death squad cells. Interior Minister Jawad al-Bolani, a Shiite, was traveling in an armored car in a convoy of about 10 vehicles when the bomb exploded in the Dora neighborhood. The blast killed two bystanders, including a 12-year-old, and wounded five traffic policemen, said Dora police officer Mohammad al Baghdadi. It was not clear if he was the intended target or whether the bomb had been meant for a U.S. military convoy that was about 500 yards behind. Al-Bolani is a senior member of Iraq's new unity government, which is struggling to put down a Sunni insurgency and sectarian fighting between Shiite and Sunni extremists in Baghdad. Hotbed for violence Dora had become a hotbed of militancy and sectarian violence, particularly after a Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite mosque in the town of Samarra, north of Baghdad, that stoked fears of a civil war in Iraq. Dora residents had dubbed one street "death road" because of the frequent clashes there between insurgents and police. But U.S. officials said last week they had virtually cleared Dora of death squad cells, insurgent sympathizers and extremists as part of a new security strategy to clean up the capital neighborhood by neighborhood. About 12,000 additional U.S. and Iraqi troops have been brought in to the capital as part of the security effort. Another area targeted in the operation is the Azamiyah neighborhood in north Baghdad, where two mortar rounds exploded near a Sunni mosque Wednesday night, wounding seven civilians, said Sgt. Zekariyah Hussein of Azamiyah's police station. Suicide bomber Elsewhere in Iraq, a suicide bomber blew himself up outside police headquarters in the northern city of Mosul, killing one person, while British officials said a barrage of 17 mortar rounds were fired at one of their bases in the south. The suicide bomber in Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, detonated his explosives when he was stopped at a checkpoint as he tried to enter the police building, said Maj. Gen. Wathiq al-Hamdani, the city police chief. One woman was killed and 10 people were injured in the blast, he said. Mosul, a predominantly Sunni Arab city, has been the scene of frequent attacks on Iraqi government facilities by Sunni insurgents. The 17 mortar rounds were fired Tuesday at Camp Abu Naji, a British base in Amarah, 200 miles southeast of Baghdad, Maj. Charlie Burbridge, spokesman for British forces, said from Basra. One British soldier was wounded and was hospitalized, he said. Saddam trial Meanwhile, during the genocide trial of Saddam Hussein, Kurds talked Wednesday of entire families killed in chemical weapons attacks against their villages in the 1980s, saying survivors plunged their faces into milk to end the pain from the blinding gas or fled into the hills on mules as military helicopters fired on them. After hours of grim testimony, the chief judge Abdullah al-Amiri adjourned until Sept. 11 to consider defense appeals over the legitimacy of the tribunal. Four survivors took the stand on the third day of proceedings against Saddam and six co-defendants over the Anfal campaign, a massive military assault in northern Iraq in which tens of thousands of Kurds were killed. The offensive leveled hundreds of villages — many struck by chemical weapons — with their residents herded into prison camps where many of the men disappeared and were executed, according to prosecutors. Saddam and the other defendants largely sat silently as the survivors gave their accounts. Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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