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Gunmen Kill 75 in Revenge
Shootings in Iraq
'Pakistan
Times' Foreign Desk
MOSUL (Iraq): The death
toll from a revenge shooting rampage in the northern Iraqi town of Tal Afar
has risen to 70 with another 40 people missing and 30 more wounded, an army
brigadier general said Wednesday.
Brigadier General Khorshid Dosti also said the death toll from two bomb
attacks that preceded the killings had risen to 85 with another 183 people
wounded.
An update story from Baghdad says militants and police enraged by deadly
truck bombings went on a shooting rampage against Sunnis in a northwestern
Iraqi city Wednesday, killing as many as 70 men execution-style in the
latest eruption of sectarian violence outside the capital.
The gunmen roamed Sunni neighborhoods in Tal Afar through the night,
shooting at residents and homes, according to police and a local Sunni
politician. Witnesses said relatives of the Shiite victims in the truck
bombings broke into Sunni homes and killed the men inside or dragged them
out and shot them in the streets.
Gen. Khourshid al-Douski, the Iraqi army commander in charge of the area,
said 70 were shot in the back of the head and 40 people were kidnapped. A
senior hospital official in Tal Afar, who spoke on condition of anonymity
out of security concerns, said 45 men were killed.
Outraged groups blamed security forces for the killings. Prime Minister
Nouri al-Maliki's office ordered an investigation and the U.S. command
offered to provide assistance.
The revenge killings among Shiites in the religiously mixed city 260 miles
northwest of Baghdad were triggered by truck bombings in Tal Afar on Tuesday
that killed 80 people and wounded 185.
Al-Douski said one of the trucks exploded after the driver lured people in a
predominantly Shiite neighborhood to the site by telling them he was
distributing free flour from a humanitarian organization. The bombing caused
surrounding buildings to collapse, leaving huge piles of concrete and bricks
dusted with white four.
Videotaped footage from the scene was broadcast Wednesday night showing a
man dead in the front seat of his car. Men and women carried the limp bodies
of children powdered with flour. Others dug through the rubble with their
bare hands in a search for survivors.
The revenge killings coincided with the U.S. Senate debate Wednesday on a
bill that would set a spring 2008 timetable for withdrawing American troops.
Democrats in Congress are acting on growing voter impatience with the war,
but President Bush declared the deadline would have disastrous
repercussions.
The Association of Muslim Scholars said the revenge killings were evidence
"of the clear plot and coordination between the militias and the government
forces of interior and defense."
"If yesterday's attacks were carried out by unidentified terrorists, today's
events were conducted by well-known criminal policemen and they must be
punished," Sunni lawmaker Dhafer al-Ani said. "The whole situation in Iraq
needs to be reconsidered and a quick solution is needed to the political
process."
Tal Afar, about 90 miles east of the Syrian border, is mainly populated by
ethnic Turks, with Shiites making up about 60 percent of the 200,000
residents.
The wheat-belt city was an insurgent stronghold until an offensive by U.S.
and Iraqi troops in September 2005, when militants fled into the countryside
without a fight. Last March, Bush cited the operation as an example that
gave him "confidence in our strategy."
The city, which is known for tomatoes and cattle, has suffered frequent
insurgent attacks, despite sand barriers erected around it by U.S. and Iraqi
forces. But the situation had been calm in recent months and some displaced
Shiite and Sunni families had started to return to their homes.
Army troops moved into Sunni areas of the city Wednesday to stop the
violence, confining police to their bases and enacting a curfew. Calm was
restored by mid-afternoon, said Wathiq al-Hamdani, the provincial police
chief, and his head of operations, Brig. Abdul-Karim al-Jibouri.
Hundreds of residents — including relatives of bombing victims — rallied
later Wednesday, demanding the resignations of the police chief and the
mayor, as well as the release of the detained Shiite policemen.
Meanwhile, U.S. officials remained cautiously optimistic about a security
crackdown that is entering its seventh week in Baghdad. The U.S. has sent
about 30,000 extra troops to assist in the operation, which many see as a
last-ditch attempt to bring peace to Iraq.
"We are seeing preliminary signs of progress," U.S. military spokesman Rear
Adm. Mark Fox said Wednesday, but he cautioned that "there will be rough
days ahead."
"Progress does not come without a cost," he said. "Like backing a rat into a
corner, increasing pressure on the extremists by limiting their available
resources and places to hide leads to desperate changes in tactics."
The new tactics included using chlorine, a highly toxic chemical, in at
least eight bombings since Jan. 28. On Wednesday, suicide bombers detonated
explosives on trucks carrying the chemical outside the Fallujah government
center, about 40 miles west of Baghdad.
About 15 U.S. and Iraqi security forces were wounded in the attack, although
the bombers were shot and set off their explosives before reaching
government buildings, the U.S. military said.
At least 70 people were killed or found dead elsewhere in Iraq, including
four people in two car bombings in Baghdad. A parked car bomb struck a
market in the predominantly Shiite city of Mahaweel, south of Baghdad,
killing at least four people.●
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