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Monday, January 25, 2010

Baghdad Suicide Bombers Kill 37, Injures 70 Prior To Elections




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Iraq Capital Baghdad Rocked By Deadly Triple Bombing


At least 36 people have died in three large explosions apparently targeting hotels in the heart of Iraq's capital.

More than 70 people were injured in the Baghdad blasts, which officials said were caused by suicide car bombers.

They struck near the Sheraton, Babylon and Hamra hotels, which are popular with Western businessmen and media.

They came as the government announced Saddam Hussein's ex-defence minister, Ali Hassan al-Majid - also known as Chemical Ali - had been executed.

Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said the bombs "represent an extension" of activities by insurgents linked to Saddam Hussein's regime, Associated Press news agency reported.

But he stopped short of directly connecting the blast with the hanging of Majid.

The man known as Chemical Ali had received several death sentences, including for the mass killing of Iraqi Kurds in the village of Halabja in 1988.

The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says it is clear Monday's bombs were co-ordinated and intended to undermine recent security gains as Iraq prepares for a March general election.

The first explosion toppled large concrete blast-walls like dominoes outside the Sheraton, by the Tigris River, causing a huge cloud of dust to envelop the hotel.

Ceiling collapses

An Iraqi journalist, Zina Tareq, who was in her office at the time, told how she dived under a desk with the five-year-old daughter of a colleague.

"We heard a deafening sound. The ceiling collapsed on us and the windows shattered," she told Reuters news agency.

The second and third bombs went off within minutes near the Babylon Hotel in the central district of Karrada, and close to the Hamra Hotel in the southern district of Jadriyah.

The Iraqi military spokesman in Baghdad, Maj Gen Qassim Atta, said all three attacks were suicide car bombs, reports AFP news agency.

The blasts differed from others recently in that they appeared to target hotels rather than government buildings.

Attacks in August, October and December last year - which killed nearly 400 people - rocked the ministries of finance, foreign affairs and justice.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki blamed the bombs in August and October on groups loyal to Saddam Hussein's now-banned Baath Party.

There have been fears of more violence ahead of the 7 March election, seen as important for consolidating Iraq's democracy and keeping a US military exit by the end of 2011 on schedule.

Our correspondent says the latest attacks come against a background of generally improved security in the country.

But insurgents are clearly bent on trying to shake stability before the election, he adds.

It is to be the second parliamentary ballot since the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.




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Sources: BBC News, MSNBC, Google Maps

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