Crowds Celebrate 13 Deaths in Iraq Blast 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A car bomb shattered a convoy of Westerners in 
Baghdad Monday, killing at least 13 people, including three General 
Electric workers and two bodyguards. Crowds rejoiced over the attack, 
dancing around a charred body and shouting "Down with the USA!" 
 

The blast, during the morning rush hour near busy Tahrir Square, was 
the second vehicle bombing in Baghdad in as many days amid an upsurge 
of bloodshed in the capital only two weeks before the formal end of 
the U.S.-led occupation. 

Iraq (news - web sites)'s interior minister said he believed 
foreigners carried out the attack, and Prime Minister Iyad Allawi 
accused Jordanian-born terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi of trying to 
disrupt the transfer of sovereignty. Al-Zarqawi, believed to have 
contacts with al-Qaida, is accused in last month's decapitation of 
American Nicholas Berg. 

The chaotic scene Monday was reminiscent of the violence and anti-
American hatred that accompanied the March 31 slaying in Fallujah of 
four Americans, whose bodies were mutilated and hung from a Euphrates 
river bridge. 

Moments after the thunderous blast, which shook the heart of the 
capital, young men raced into the street, hurling stones at the 
flaming wreckage, looting personal belongings of the victims and 
chanting slogans against the occupation. 

Iraqi police stood by helplessly � unable to control the crowd only 
weeks before they are to assume more security responsibility under 
the U.S. exit strategy. 

As flames and smoke enveloped the vehicles, youths taunted American 
troops and threatened Western journalists. American troops beat one 
man with a stick, but after failing to restrain the crowd, the troops 
and police withdrew. 

Crowds chanted "Down with the USA!" and set fire to an American flag. 
Young men gleefully displayed a British passport and identification 
card issued by the Coalition Provisional Authority. 

As the police left, the crowd poured kerosene into one of the 
vehicles and set it on fire. Heavy, black smoke poured from the 
vehicle. About 20 youths danced around a charred body. 

The dead included three employees of Granite Services Inc., a wholly 
owned, Tampa, Fla.-based subsidiary of General Electric Co., and two 
security contractors employed by Olive Security of London. The 
Westerners included one American, two Britons, one Frenchman and one 
victim of undetermined nationality, officials said. 

U.S. officials said 62 people were injured, including 10 foreign 
contractors. Hospital officials said many of the wounded had lost 
limbs. 

The foreign victims were helping to rebuild power plants, Allawi 
said. 

The attack was the latest in a series directed against Iraq's 
infrastructure or those seeking to rebuild it after decades of war, 
international sanctions and Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s 
tyranny. 

GE said Monday it has no plans to pull its workers out of the 
country. 

"We remain committed to the reconstruction of Iraq," said GE 
spokeswoman Louise Binns. 

Nevertheless, the bombing dramatizes the dangerous challenge the 
United States faces as it struggles to revive the country's power 
supply and show Iraqis the occupation can improve their lives. 

The attacks have sent contractors scurrying from Iraq. They've slowed 
improvements and caused the U.S.-led coalition to fall short of its 
goal of delivering 6,000 megawatts of consistent power in June. Power 
generation currently hovers at about prewar levels of 4,400 
megawatts. 

Before the war, Baghdad residents enjoyed about 20 hours of 
electricity a day. Baghdad's problem is that American authorities 
redistributed electricity evenly across the country � everybody now 
gets 8-12 hours a day. 

U.S. officials said they were uncertain whether the bomb was 
detonated by a suicide attacker. 

A policeman, Ghahtan Abood, said the bomb went off when a vehicle 
rammed the contractors' three-vehicle convoy as it sped down the 
street. However, coalition officials said they were unsure of the 
account and that the bomb may have been planted along the street and 
detonated as the convoy passed. 

An Interior Ministry official said 13 people were killed in the 
blast, including the five foreigners. 

The bomb exploded as three SUVs carrying the contractors were passing 
through the square. The blast destroyed eight vehicles and turned 
nearby shops and a two-story house to rubble. 

Terrified and dazed survivors scrambled to pull victims from the 
wreckage. One elderly man, pale and semiconscious, was carried away 
in his blood-soaked nightclothes. 

Iraqi bystanders scooped up victims and loaded them into vehicles or 
pickup trucks to speed them to hospitals. Body parts and fragments of 
clothing lay scattered around the street. 

Even some of the wounded were angry at the Americans. 

"Maybe the Americans have done this to us to allow them to stay on 
longer," Qais Alwan said from his hospital bed. "OK, let them stay, 
but why are they doing this to us? All the victims are Iraqis, so by 
God, they must be Americans because Iraqis don't kill fellow Iraqi 
brothers." 

But Allawi, the prime minister, implicated al-Zarqawi, who has also 
been accused of the 2002 assassination of an American diplomat in 
Jordan. 

"Al-Zarqawi and his followers are earnestly working to prevent the 
success of this measure," Allawi said. "I want our people to be 
patient this month against those forces that are trying to assault 
them, and I promise the people that we are going to get rid of them 
and victory will be ours to build a free and decent Iraq life." 

Allawi, who was close to the CIA (news - web sites) and State 
Department during his years in exile, said his government was 
preparing tough measures to deal with the violence. He offered no 
details. 

In other violence Monday, police said a car bomb went off near the 
town of Salman Pak southeast of Baghdad when a gray Opel drove 
between police vehicles and exploded, killing four people and 
wounding four others. However, the report could not be independently 
confirmed, and police were unable to provide a detailed report of the 
incident. 

In Mosul, four members of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps were wounded 
when a bomb exploded as they were patrolling near the U.S. base there




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