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Car Bomb Kills 30 in Southern Iraq

By ROBERT H. REID
,
AP
posted: 153 DAYS 20 HOURS AGO
comments: 345
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BAGHDAD (June 10) - A car bomb blew up Wednesday in a packed outdoor food market in one of the most peaceful areas of Iraq's Shiite south, killing about 30 people and wounding dozens more. The blast raised fears that militants may be planning more strikes in remote, poorly secured areas, seeking to stretch Iraq's security services as they take on a bigger role in Baghdad and other flashpoint cities.
Angry townspeople swarmed around police in the wake of the attack, cursing and blaming them for failing to prevent the bombing.
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Latest Photos From Iraq
In this photo taken Sunday, July 26, 2009, a supporter of the Kurdish opposition group celebrates at a street party in Sulaimaniyah, 260 kilometers (160 miles) northeast of Baghdad, Iraq. The group, called "change," has made a surprisingly strong showing in elections for the self-ruled Kurdish region in Iraq, tapping into widespread frustration over alleged corruption and intimidation by the longtime ruling establishment. (AP Photo/Yahya Ahmed)
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No group claimed responsibility for the explosion, which occurred during the morning shopping period in Bathaa, a small Euphrates River town near Nasiriyah about 200 miles (320 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad.
But the country's Shiite vice president, Adel Abdul-Mahdi, blamed al-Qaida and Sunni insurgents with links to Saddam Hussein's banned Baath party.
"Targeting stable and secure areas is a desperate effort ... to reignite sectarian sedition and try to affect security and political progress," Abdul-Mahdi said in a statement.
The blast was the latest in a series of high-profile explosions that have raised concerns about a resurgence of violence as the U.S. military faces a June 30 deadline to withdraw from urban areas in Iraq.
It was the deadliest bombing in the Nasiriyah area since Nov. 12, 2003, when a suicide truck bomber attacked the headquarters of Italian forces stationed there, killing more than 30 people.
Since then, however, surrounding Dhi Qar province has been relatively peaceful. Security responsibility for the area was transferred from the U.S.-led coalition to the Iraqis in September 2006 while Sunni-Shiite warfare was raging in Baghdad and elsewhere in the country.
Large-scale bombings targeting Shiite civilians have been a common tactic of al-Qaida and other Sunni extremists — especially in Baghdad. But they have been rare in remote southern communities like Bathaa, an overwhelmingly Shiite town where outsiders are viewed with suspicion.
Stunned survivors expressed shock that their town was targeted. Some voiced anger at the police for lax security, prompting the provincial governor to fire the town police chief.
"We did not expect that such an explosion would happen here. It is a market for the poor people of Bathaa. It is a big failure of the security measures here," said Amir Talib, 28, who helped evacuate the wounded.
Haidar al-Ghizi, a town council member, said police were supposed to search cars in the area.
"I don't know how this car got through," he said. "There has been negligence and poor performance from police."
After the blast, dozens of young men gathered at the blast site, shouting and cursing the police for lax security, according to eyewitnesses. Iraqi army soldiers rushed to the scene to protect the police.
Authorities increased security at the main entry points to the province and in the Nasiriyah city center to prevent the possibility of another bombing.
Witnesses described a grisly scene of mangled bodies, including women and children, littering the main street in the first terrifying moments after the blast. So many victims were blown to pieces that authorities were having trouble determining the precise death toll.
Sajad Sharhan, the head of the provincial security committee, said 29 people were killed and 55 wounded. An Interior Ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information, put the death toll at 28.
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A World of Danger
Three residents were missing and presumed dead after a mudslide buried their home July 18 in a crater along a lake shore in central Germany. Here, the remains of an adjacent home -- half of it gone -- stand on the edge of the crater.
Jens Meyer, AP
Jens Meyer, AP
A spokesman for the Nasiriyah hospital, Kadhim al-Obeidi, said 35 people were killed and 45 wounded.
Persistent violence in areas of Iraq has raised new questions about the readiness of Iraqi forces to take over their own security.
President Barack Obama plans to end the U.S. combat role in Iraq by September 2010, with the last American forces to leave the country by 2012.
The withdrawal timetable is provided for in a U.S.-Iraqi security pact that took effect on Jan. 1.
The Iraqi government has agreed to hold a national referendum on the agreement as required by parliament but said it wanted to hold the vote early next year instead of this summer as originally planned.
Tuesday's Cabinet decision, which needs approval from Iraq's parliament, means the referendum would be held together with national parliamentary elections on Jan. 30.
Adding the referendum met a demand by the main Sunni bloc in parliament and raised the possibility that U.S. troops may have to leave even sooner if the voters reject the security agreement.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-06-10 06:32:20

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Arentany

10:34 PMJun 13 2009

This obviously wasn't a car bomb. It was the latest GM product being tested.

AVG RATING:
(0)

JohnRia

04:34 PMJun 12 2009

We are pulling out because it is an unwinnable war. We lost this one too. In Vietnam we had to hurry to get our last troops out. Here we do so leasurely because doing otherwise would give this country another black eye. Now we can pretend that we left the country in good hands, with Iraqi security forces in charge, and if they screw it up it is all their fault. In a few years we will see a repeat of this in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Why do we never learn?

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(1)

JeffI214

03:50 PMJun 11 2009

Israel must be behind these bombings. They want US military stay in Iraq.

AVG RATING:
(8)

Mnmholly

05:50 AMJun 11 2009

The US was paying Millions upon Millions a month out to Iraqi Sunni Leaders, Tribal Chieftains and Insurgent Fighters to stop fighting, to 'go on vacation' the last two years of Bush's Presidency; we paid 'Bribes' for a Temporary Peace that would make the Bush Surge look successful on paper but the Iraqi Government has discontinued the Bribes as we have turned military operations over to their troops and we certainly don't have the money to keep bribing the Iraqis. It doesn't change anything though, It's Time To Get Out of Iraq, even if we have to use a Bush Lie about the success of the Surge, it seems fair since a Bush Lie about WMD got US into Iraq! Republicans used a Lie to get US Lost in Iraq so lets use their second big Lie to Leave Iraq! The Surge Worked, Let's Get the Troops Home!

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(3)

Ashls28

01:57 AMJun 11 2009

So nearly 80% of people think that if the US pulls its troops from Iraq it will become less stable, yet 53% still want the withdrawl. Is that not asking for more trouble? Do you even care about what our actions now will cost future generations?

AVG RATING:
(2)

Hccharles3

10:53 PMJun 11 2009

Actually, It was a celebration of the Iraqi Car Dealership Association. Get ready. The Mohammad Sedans are ready for wheelin' and dealin' Check out the explosive ,deals at your local dealer, today.

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(2)

Jancf

10:17 PMJun 11 2009

When Bush was Commander in Chief the place was under control.Now that the appeaser Obama is in charge the Muslims are encouraged to resume their cowardly way of fighting._____Rubbish. Are you really talking about one town in Iraq? And extrapolating from that? About the country? Under control? What are you talking about? And why not go and study the definition of appeasement...Limbaugh and Hannity use it the wrong way. Obama's approach is much, much more intelligent than Bush's, and more powerful. They really don't see him as weak, but rather as the enemy who is destroying their rationale for anti-Americanism. I'd also be careful about confusing pseudo-Muslim terrorists with Muslims in general.

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Michctr

10:01 PMJun 11 2009

VOTE THESE PARTY HACKS OUT ALONG WITH THE LOBBYISTS AND IT MAKES NO DIFFERENCE DEMOCRUD OR REPUKE, AS LONG AS THEY VOTE ALONG PARTY LINES THROW THESE A$$HOLES OUTALONG WITH THE MAIN PRIMA DONNA WHO RIDES HER A$$ BACK AND FORTH TO CALIFORKYIN A 747 AT TAXPAYER EXPENSE WHAT A CRUD AND SHE WANTS THE AUTO EXECS. TO DRIVE IN YUGOS.

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janezou1986

09:53 PMJun 11 2009

Welcome to the largest and most successful interracial dating site in the world!_____www.BlackWhiteDate.com____ is for sincere singles of all races, seriously looking for an interracial relationship or interracial marriage. Thousands of new members daily. Join now to meet your dream date in this comfortable community of different cultures and ethnicities.

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Toumodge

09:49 PMJun 11 2009

Some of us are truly ill-infomed. In Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan and the rest of the Islamic World we are the PROBLEM and NOT the SOLUTION.

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A car bomb ripped through a market district Wednesday in a mainly Shiite area in southern Iraq, killing as many as 35 people and wounding dozens, officials said.