Suicide Attacks Rock Iraq, in Second Day of Carnage

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24 April 2009


Iraqi police say a pair of suicide bombings in Baghdad Friday
killed at least 60 people and wounded more than 100 others.  It was
the second day of carnage in the Iraqi capital.


Officials say
the two suicide bombers blew themselves up in the midst of a throng of
Shi'ite worshipers outside the Imam Mousa al Kazim shrine.

Eyewitnesses say panic swept through the crowd of worshipers, after the first explosion, causing a stampede.

Many
Iraqis fear the bombings, clearly aimed at the Shi'ite community, could
reignite sectarian violence in the country, after months of relative
quiet. U.S. troops are scheduled to withdraw from Iraq's major cities
by the end of June.

Two suicide bombings, Thursday, one in Baghdad and one in Diyala province, left at least 78 people dead.

Both of those attacks were also aimed at Shi'ite targets, one of which killed dozens of Iranian pilgrims at a restaurant.

Uday
Abu Tabikha, a spokesman for Iraq's Red Crescent Society, says that the
upsurge in violence has a variety of causes and it may get worse.

He
says that the increase in violence has many different reasons,
including the results of the [January] provincial elections, and the
fact that citizens are not happy with the government. There could also
be a further upsurge in violence, he adds. Other reasons for the
violence, he notes, are a traditional spike in fighting during the
month of April, when insurgents like to fight, in addition to the
stalemate in reconciliation talks (between Sunnis and Shi'ites).


Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki (file photo)
Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki (file photo)

Al-Iraqia TV reported that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has appointed a committee to examine the recent spike in violence.

An
announcement, Thursday, that Iraqi security forces had allegedly
captured the head of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, caused
some analysts to suggest the wave of suicide bombings could be related
to his capture.

The latest spike in violence followed what had been a steady decline in killings over the past year.