Gunmen kidnap 50 or more in Baghdad
Despite increasing efforts, the nation and its capital are still not secure.
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Gunmen in police uniforms staged a brazen daylight raid on bus stations in central Baghdad on Monday, kidnapping at least 50 people, including travelers, merchants and vendors selling tea and sandwiches.
The operation was a direct challenge to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's efforts to restore security in the capital, which has been hard hit by suicide attacks, roadside bombs and sectarian death squads.
Gunmen arrived at midmorning Monday and began randomly grabbing people in the shabby business district, where several transportation companies are based and buses pick up passengers bound mostly for Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, Lt. Col. Falah al-Mohamedawi said. Both Shiites and Sunnis work in the area.
The attackers blocked the roads and beat people before putting bags on the captives' heads and leading to vehicles one by one, a witness told an Iraqi television station. They herded their victims into more than a dozen vehicles, according to officials.
"They took all the workers from the companies and nearby shops," said Haidar Mohammed Eleibi, who works for the Swan Transportation Co. in the Salihiya area.
He said his brother and a cousin were among those taken away, along with merchants, passers-by and even men selling tea and sandwiches.
"They did not give any reason for it," he said. "Police came afterward and did nothing."
Another transportation worker, Amjad Hameed, said 15 cars rushed into the area and the random seizures began. "We asked them why but nobody replied," he said.
The Shiite-dominated Interior Ministry, which oversees the police and has been accused of backing militias in sectarian violence, denied its forces were behind the attack.
Al-Mohamedawi and the ministry said at least 50 people were abducted.
Not the first
There have been other mass kidnappings in Iraq. In a similar attack, gunmen dressed as Interior Ministry commandos stormed into the al-Rawafid Security Co.'s east Baghdad headquarters and took away 50 people, many of them former military personnel from Saddam Hussein's regime. Those workers have not been heard from since the March 8 attack.
Monday's kidnapping was the latest in a series of setbacks for al-Maliki. The Shiite prime minister has also been frustrated in his efforts to crack down on sectarian and militia violence in the oil-rich southern city of Basra, where attacks have been unabated despite his declaration of a state of emergency Wednesday.
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