[Excerpt: In the deadliest attack, a car driven by a suicide bomber 
rammed an Iraqi army patrol in Samarra, a mainly Sunni Arab city north 
of Baghdad where US and Iraqi forces launched a massive operation last 
October to wrest control from insurgents before the vote......As 
security forces sealed off the sector to evacuate victims, a second car 
burst onto the scene from the direction of a nearby hospital. Eight 
soldiers and three civilians were killed, police said.]

http://sg.news.yahoo.com/050127/1/3q58k.html
Friday January 28, 1:06 AM  
Iraq insurgents step up onslaught as election campaign ends
AFP
At least 30 people were killed in Iraq as insurgents intensified attacks 
on Iraqi and US targets, and election workers backed by troops started 
distributing ballot boxes for the vote in three days' time.

Militants have promised an all-out onslaught against the election, but 
US President George W. Bush urged Iraqis to brave death threats and 
seize what he termed an "historic opportunity" to vote.

New attacks across the country followed the deaths of 31 US military 
personnel in a helicopter crash in western Iraq on Wednesday, while six 
other US soldiers died elsewhere in the deadliest day for American 
forces since the March 2003 invasion.

In the deadliest attack, a car driven by a suicide bomber rammed an 
Iraqi army patrol in Samarra, a mainly Sunni Arab city north of Baghdad 
where US and Iraqi forces launched a massive operation last October to 
wrest control from insurgents before the vote.

As security forces sealed off the sector to evacuate victims, a second 
car burst onto the scene from the direction of a nearby hospital. Eight 
soldiers and three civilians were killed, police said.

In Baquba, north of the capital, a car bomb attack on a provincial 
government headquarters killed five people.

"A peace conference gathering former Baathists, tribal leaders, clerics 
and political officials, was being held in the building at the time of 
the attack," said police lieutenant colonel Mohammed Mahmud.

South of Baghdad, in the so-called triangle of death, a homemade bomb 
killed five Iraqis and wounded 15 on the road between Mahmudiyah and 
Latifiyah. A US marine was killed in the same area.

Another six people were killed in clashes between Iraqi and US troops 
and insurgents in Samarra and in Ramadi, an insurgent stronghold west of 
the capital.

New bomb attacks rocked the northern oil centre of Kirkuk, one targeting 
a US military convoy. A police officer was killed in Saddam Hussein's 
hometown of Tikrit on Wednesday night.

Another US soldier was shot dead overnight in Diyala province, north of 
Baghdad.

With some 40 polling stations already destroyed by insurgent attack, 
even the distribution of ballot boxes for Iraq's estimated 14.2 million 
eligible voters underscored the tension hanging over the poll.

Militants loyal to Iraq's most wanted man, Al-Qaeda frontman Abu Musab 
al-Zarqawi, issued a dire warning to would-be voters Wednesday. "Beware, 
beware, Iraqis, don't approach the (polling) centres of infidelity and 
vice," said the statement posted on an Islamist website.

In the Shiite holy city of Najaf south of the capital, police, US and 
Iraqi forces sealed off a one kilometre (0.6 mile) perimeter around a 
school being used as a polling station as boxes were taken in.

Amid the relentless violence, the electoral commission pressed on with 
its mission in the closing hours of the campaign.

Ballot boxes were distributed to 5,300-odd polling centres across the 
country, along with millions of ballot papers and tens of thousands of 
bottles of indelible ink which voters will be tagged with to avoid fraud.

The total number of electoral staff is expected to swell to 200,000 on 
polling day.

The US president said the vote offered an "historic opportunity" for 
Iraqis to start building a truly democratic society after decades of 
brutal dictatorship.

"This is a historic opportunity for the people of Iraq to vote for a 
government," Bush said in an interview with Arabic televison station 
Al-Arabiya.

"And I want to express my appreciation for the courageous Iraqis who are 
willing to step forth and promote democracy, and urge all the citizens 
in Iraq to vote and to show the terrorists they cannot stop the march of 
freedom."

Despite the security efforts by the Iraqi government, backed by more 
than 150,000 US and other foreign troops, fears of greater violence hit 
world oil prices.

New York's benchmark contract -- light sweet crude for delivery in March 
-- climbed 11 cents to 48.89 dollars a barrel. In London, the price of 
Brent North Sea crude for March delivery gained 15 cents to 46.66 
dollars a barrel.

"Fear of violence and sabotage attacks in the run-up to Iraqi elections 
on Sunday continues to underpin the market," one analyst said.

Sunday's election has been marred not only by growing violence but also 
by a boycott by many Sunni politicians concerned that the election will 
cede power to the long-oppressed Shiite majority.

Bush said he was "heartened by comments made by Shiite leaders who had 
promised that the new government would be inclusive and allow members of 
the Sunni community to take part in deciding Iraq's future."
enditem



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