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Car Bombs, Attacks Kill 18 in
Baghdad
'Pakistan Times' Wire Service
BAGHDAD: A suicide bomber
struck a funeral in Baghdad on Tuesday, killing at least seven people as
militants show increasing defiance to a major security operation in the
capital.
The attacker, wearing a belt packed with explosives, followed a funeral
procession into a tent before detonating the blast in a mostly Shiite
district of eastern Baghdad, police said. At least 15 people were injured.
In other bloodshed across Baghdad, a car bomb and a suicide attacker killed
at least 11 people. About 12 miles outside the capital, a truck carrying
chlorine gas exploded. Two people died in the explosion and nearly 150
exposed to the fumes were treated for injuries, according to Brig. Gen.
Qassim Moussawi, a military spokesman who said a bomb was planted under the
tanker.
More than 100 people have been killed in the Baghdad area since Sunday in a
direct challenge to efforts by U.S. and Iraqi forces to restore some
authority on the streets and give the embattled government some breathing
room.
The first attacks came during the busy morning rush for goods and fuel. A
car rigged with explosives tore through a line of cars at a gas station in
the Sadiyah district in southwestern Baghdad.
Police said at least six people were killed and 14 injured in the
neighborhood, which is mixed between the majority Shiites and Sunnis whose
militant factions are blamed for many of the recent bombings and attacks.
Later, a suicide attacker drove a bomb-laden car into a vegetable market
near a Shiite enclave in southern Baghdad. At least five people were killed
and seven injured, police said. The same market in the mostly Sunni Dora
district was targeted last month by three car bombs that killed 10 people.
On Monday, insurgents staged a bold daylight assault against a U.S. combat
post north of Baghdad, killing two soldiers and injuring 17. The U.S.
military called it a "coordinated attack" — which began with a suicide car
bombing and then gunfire on soldiers pinned down in a former Iraqi police
station, where fuel storage tanks were set ablaze by the blast.
The head-on attack in Tarmiyah, about 30 miles north of Baghdad, was notable
for both its tactics and target. Insurgents have mostly used hit-and-run
ambushes, roadside bombs or mortars on U.S. troops and stayed away from
direct assaults on fortified military compounds to avoid U.S. firepower.●
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