http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=3195716



 


7 killed on bus in Iraq; parliament hit 

By RAVI NESSMAN 
Associated Press Writer

Virginian Pilot

May 21, 2007

BAGHDAD (AP) -- Gunmen in two cars attacked a minibus heading to Baghdad
from a Shiite town north of the capital Monday, killing seven passengers,
including a child, police said. A mortar shell hit the roof of the
parliament building inside the heavily guarded Green Zone in Baghdad, but no
one was injured, a lawmaker said.

Thousands of soldiers, meanwhile, continued combing through fields and
questioning suspects as the search for three missing U.S. soldiers continued
following a May 12 ambush south of Baghdad that killed four other soldiers
and their interpreter.

The minibus, which left the town of Khalis, was driving near the
violence-wracked city of Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, when it was
ambushed outside the town of Hibhib, police said.

The attack underscored the sectarian violence and instability that continues
to plague Diyala province north of Baghdad despite the three-month-old
security crackdown in Baghdad and surrounding areas.

In western Baghdad, a roadside bomb exploded near a group of Iraqi soldiers
patrolling the Sunni-dominated Adil neighborhood in western Baghdad, killing
three of the soldiers and injuring two.

In the confusion of the attack, the soldiers fired near the office of Adnan
al-Dulaimi, the leader of parliament's largest Sunni Arab bloc, the Iraqi
Accordance Front, according to his office. No one was injured.

The stepped-up U.S. and Iraqi patrols of the capital during the crackdown
have left the troops more vulnerable to attack by insurgents, military
officials say.

The U.S. military reported Sunday that six U.S. soldiers on patrol in
Baghdad were killed in a roadside bombing along with their interpreter on
Saturday. A seventh soldier died in a blast Saturday in Diwaniya, a mostly
Shiite city 80 miles south of the capital, where radical Shiite militias
operate.

Those deaths brought the number of American troops killed in Iraq since
Friday to at least 15 - eight of them in Baghdad. So far, at least 71 U.S.
troops have died in Iraq this month - most of them from bombs.

The mortar shell that hit parliament landed almost above the office of the
parliament speaker and caused only minor damage, said lawmaker Sabah
al-Saadi, who was at a committee meeting inside at the time.

A few hours later, several more mortar rounds were fired. Some of them
landed in the Green Zone, but there were no reports of casualties, the U.S.
Embassy said.

An April 12 suicide bombing in the parliament's dining hall killed one
lawmaker.

The blast was part of a sharp increase in recent weeks of mortar attacks on
the Green Zone, which also houses other Iraqi government offices and the
U.S. Embassy. The compound, on the banks of the Tigris River, is surrounded
by cement walls and patrolled by U.S. and Iraqi soldiers, as well as private
security guards.

Amid the almost daily mortar barrages, people living inside have questioned
whether it is truly safe to remain there.

Journalists have also been targeted by the violence, and the Iraqi newspaper
Azzaman reported Monday that one of its reporters, Ali Khalil, 22, was
kidnapped while leaving a relative's house in the increasingly volatile
Baiyaa neighborhood of Baghdad and found dead several hours later. Khalil
was survived by his wife and 1-week-old baby, the newspaper said.

The attack came three days after two Iraqi journalists working for ABC News
were ambushed and killed on their way home from work. The New York-based
Committee to Protect Journalists said 104 journalists - not including Khalil
- have been killed since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. About 80
percent of the journalists killed were Iraqi, according to CPJ.

In other violence Monday, two gunmen killed two police officers as they
walked by the police station in Muqdadiyah, about 60 miles north of Baghdad.

Insurgents also fired mortar rounds into a bank in Baqouba as customers were
waiting in line to collect their pensions, killing two people, police said.

Violence also hit the southern city of Basra, with gunmen killing one police
officer and wounding another in an attack on their patrol, police said.
Police also reported that the chief of customs in Basra, Col. Khalaf
al-Badran, escaped injury when a roadside bomb struck his convoy as it left
the airport. And a fuel tanker was damaged when it was hit by a roadside
bomb, police said.

Two Republican senators said Sunday at an international conference hosted by
the Geneva-based World Economic Forum in Jordan that the U.S. has evidence
Iran sent weapons and trainers to instruct militants in Iraq to carry out
terror attacks.

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, told a panel discussion on Iraq's future that
during a trip last week to Iraq, he saw "evidence that Iran was supplying
weapons and bomb-making components to Iraqi terrorists."

A former Iranian government official, who was on the same panel, denied the
claims.

"Iraq is already so full of arms that it doesn't need arms from Iran," said
hard-liner Mohammed J.A. Larijani, a former deputy foreign minister and
brother to Iran's top nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani.

But Sen. Gordon Smith, R-Ore., told the panel he saw "confiscated Iranian
weapons" and captured Iranians who confessed to a mission to train Iraqi
extremists.

C 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our
<http://apdigitalnews.com/privacy.html> Privacy Policy.

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