Khaleej Times Online >> News >> FOCUS ON IRAQ 

Suicide bomber strikes a Shiite cafe in northern Iraq, killing 26; top
official kidnapped (AP)

17 July 2006 


BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide bomber detonated explosives inside a cafe
packed with Shiites in northern Iraq, killing 26 people and injuring
22, an Iraqi general said. Gunmen seized a top Oil Ministry official,
the second major kidnapping in as many days. In the south, a British
soldier was killed and another wounded during a raid Sunday against a
"terrorist suspect" in Basra, the British military said. British
troops arrested a top Shiite militia leader in the city, Iraqi police
said, but it was unclear if the two events were linked. The US
military said an American soldier was killed in a roadside bombing in
south Baghdad. No further details were released. The suicide attack
occurred about 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the outdoor market in Tuz Khormato,
a mostly Turkomen city 130 miles (210 kilometers) north of Baghdad,
Maj. Gen. Anwar Mohammed Amin said. The powerful blast collapsed the
ceiling of the one-story cafe, burying many of the victims, witnesses
said. Hours afterward, rescuers were still sifting through the debris
looking for the dead or injured. Authorities used mosque loudspeakers
to appeal for blood donations. One of Iraq's main ethnic groups,
Turkomen follow both the Sunni and Shiite traditions of Islam. Amin
said Shiites favored the cafe because it was near a Shiite mosque. But
friction exists among Iraq's Turkomen and Kurdish populations, and the
motive for the attack was unclear. In Baghdad, gunmen seized Adel
Kazzaz, director of the North Oil Co., shortly after he left the Oil
Ministry in eastern Baghdad, ministry spokesman Assem Jihad said. They
beat his bodyguards and whisked him away, Jihad said. The
government-owned North Oil Co. runs Iraq's oil fields around the
northern city of Kirkuk, and Kazzaz was in the capital for a meeting
with ministry officials. The northern fields have been plagued for
years by sabotage attacks on pipelines and other infrastructure. Oil
exports were restored last month after a long delay but halted again
last week and not expected to resume soon. The high-profile kidnapping
came one day after gunmen abducted the head of Iraq's National Olympic
Committee and 30 other people. Six were set free Sunday in eastern
Baghdad, left blindfolded and unharmed, Iraq's Sport Journalist Union
said. There was no word on the other hostages, including the Olympic
National Committee chairman, Ahmed al-Hijiya. A British military
statement said the British soldier was mortally wounded during a raid
to arrest terror suspects in a northern Basra neighborhood. British
spokesman Maj. Charlie Burbridge said the operation involved a
significant number of troops as well as helicopters and armored
personnel carriers, and that two suspects were detained. He gave no
further information. In Basra, however, police officials said British
troops had arrested Sajid Badir, leader of the Shiite-based Mahdi Army
in the city. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of
fears of retaliation by the militia group, which wields considerable
power and has infiltrated the police. Last May, Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki declared a state of emergency in Basra, the country's
second-largest city and a major oil- producing center, vowing to wield
an "iron fist" to end militia rule there. Al-Maliki, a Shiite, is
under strong pressure to disband the militias, including the Mahdi
Army, which is run by radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. The militias are
accused of fanning the flames of sectarian violence.






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