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Baghdad car bomb hits mourners, 53 dead in attacks

Relentless bloodshed across Iraq
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 27, 2011 - A massive car bomb ripped through a funeral ceremony in a Shiite district of Baghdad on Thursday, killing 48 people. Here are some of the deadliest attacks in Iraq over the past year.

2011

JANUARY
- 27: A car bombing targeting a funeral in a Shiite neighbourhood of Baghdad kills 48 people and wounds 121 others as violence across the capital leaves 53 dead.

- 20: Twin suicide car bombs kill 45 people and wound 150 others amid nationwide violence that kills 50.

- 18: A suicide attack on police recruits in Tikrit kills 50 people and wounds 150.

2010

NOVEMBER
- 8: Three car bombings in mainly Shiite southern Iraq, two targeting Iranian pilgrims, kill at least 28 people and wound 88.

- 2: Eleven car bombs in Baghdad kill 63 people and wound 285 in predominantly Shiite neighbourhoods.

OCTOBER
- 31: Forty-six Christians including two priests and seven security personnel killed in a US-led assault on a Baghdad cathedral to free dozens of hostages held by Al-Qaeda gunmen.

- 29: Thirty people killed in a suicide bombing on a cafe in Balad Ruz in Diyala province.

SEPTEMBER
- 19: At least 29 killed and 111 wounded in near-simultaneous car bombings in two Baghdad neighbourhoods. The attacks are claimed by Al-Qaeda's Iraq wing.

AUGUST
- 25: More than a dozen apparently coordinated car bombs targeting Iraqi police and other attacks blamed on Al-Qaeda kill at least 53 and wound 300.

- 17: A suicide attack against an army recruitment centre in central Baghdad kills 59 people, most of them prospective soldiers.

JULY
- 18: A suicide bomber targeting anti-Al-Qaeda militiamen kills 45 people in Radwaniyah, west of Baghdad.

- 8: A string of attacks on Shiite pilgrims over three days leading up to July 8 kills 70 people in Baghdad.

MAY
- 10: Four car bombs in the central city of Hilla kill 53 people, while dozens of attacks targeting security forces, a Shiite mosque and two Basra markets cost 57 more lives on Iraq's deadliest day of 2010.

APRIL
- 23: Six attacks on Shiite mosques in Baghdad kill at least 58 people.

MARCH
- 26: Twin bombings on a cafe and restaurant kill 52 in Khales, a Shiite town northeast of Baghdad.

by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 27, 2011
A massive car bomb ripped through a funeral ceremony in a Shiite district of Baghdad on Thursday, killing 48 people in Iraq's bloodiest day in more than two months.

The blast was the deadliest in a series of bombings Thursday that claimed 53 lives across the city, and led to an angry crowd pelting security forces with stones when they arrived at the scene.

It was the latest in an apparent surge in violence in the past 10 days that has left more people dead than attacks throughout any of the past three months.

It also comes little more than a month after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki formed a coalition government, ending nine months of deadlock following March polls.

"The government arrests terrorists, they send them to prison, and then they release them the next day," shouted Abu Mohammed Saadi, 56, one of the funeral-goers.

"Take the criminals off the streets; don't release them so quickly!"

An interior ministry official said the car bomb, which exploded outside a tent where the ceremony was being held at around 1:30 pm (1030 GMT) in the Shuala neighbourhood, killed 48 people and wounded 121.

Saadi and other witnesses said the car bomb was driven by a suicide attacker.

The blast caused part of the tent to collapse and left pools of blood and scattered pieces of clothing and shoes.

Several cars were also completely destroyed, while the windows of nearby homes were shattered. Security forces closed off many of the main roads leading to the blast site and imposed a vehicle curfew.

Policemen and soldiers who rushed to the scene were confronted by an angry mob that assaulted them with volleys of stones, with the security forces initially retreating from the scene.

The interior ministry official said "armed men" had fired on the forces who arrived, causing the soldiers and policemen to withdraw until reinforcements arrived.

A witness, Hussein Mohammed Saadi, said the crowd had become furious after the arrival of the first security force officer at the scene. Saadi said the officer played down the attack and accused members of the crowd of having planted the bomb.

Maliki ordered the arrest of the area's security chief, army Lieutenant Colonel Ahmed al-Obeidi, in the immediate aftermath of the attack.

In other blasts around the capital on Thursday, five people were killed and 21 wounded by roadside bomb attacks and a bomb placed inside a minibus.

The overall death toll of 53 was the highest for Iraq since November 2, when 11 car bombs rocked the capital, killing 63 and wounding nearly 300 in predominantly Shiite neighbourhoods.

The funeral attack was the latest targeting Shiites since a spate of car bombings last week killed 57 people outside the shrine city of Karbala.

Those bombings came ahead of a Shiite mourning ritual when hundreds of thousands of pilgrims poured into the city to mark 40 days after the Ashura anniversary commemorating the slaying of Imam Hussein, the sect's revered seventh century saint.

On January 20 on the outskirts of Karbala, three car bombs exploded among crowds of worshippers around 20 minutes apart, killing 45 people and wounding 150 others.

Another triple car bombing four days later killed 12 and wounded dozens.

Imam Hussein's death at a battle near Karbala is at the heart of the historical division between Islam's Sunni and Shiite sects.

The split has fuelled sectarian violence between Iraq's Shiite majority and the Sunni Arab minority that dominated Saddam Hussein's regime until its ouster in the US-led invasion of 2003.

Also last week, Al-Qaeda's front group in Iraq claimed responsibility for a series of suicide bombings north of Baghdad that cost more than 60 lives.

The Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) said its suicide bombers carried out attacks in Baquba and Tikrit, according to a US group that monitors jihadist statements.

The attacks in the two cities had targeted Iraqi security forces and the provincial council of Diyala, of which Baquba is the capital. The ISI accused the provincial council of attempting "to spread the Shiite doctrine" in Diyala.

Violence across Iraq since a suicide bomber blew himself up in the middle of a crowd of police recruits in Tikrit on January 18 has already killed more people -- at least 192 -- than in October, November or December, when 185, 171 and 151 people died, respectively.



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