Iraqis Killed in Baghdad Bomb Attack

06/10/2005| IslamWeb

A car bomb has exploded near the Oil Ministry in Baghdad, killing 10 people and injuring another eight, an Interior Ministry official said.

Earlier on Thursday, another car driven by a bomber targeted a convoy of three armoured vehicles in the centre of the capital, killing one person and wounding at least eight Iraqis.

Eight civilians were also wounded when an unidentified driver rammed his explosives-laden car into the three-vehicle convoy.

One of the armoured cars, vehicles generally used by private security firms, was slightly damaged, according to a policeman at the scene on Thursday.

Those hurt were in the vicinity of the attack at the time and included one woman, police added.

The attack occurred at about 9.30am in a commercial area of eastern Baghdad.

US soldier killed

In another incident, a roadside bomb hit a US army patrol in northern Baghdad on Thursday, killing one soldier, the US military said.

The attack occurred at about 8.15am, said US military spokesman.

Elsewhere in the capital, three Iraqis and one policeman were shot dead in three separate incidents, security officials said.

Kirkuk attack

Late on Wednesday, a retired Iraqi police general and his two-year-old daughter were killed in a drive-by shooting in the northern city of Kirkuk, police said on Thursday.

The wife of retired Brigadier-General Nabil Sharaf al-Din was wounded in the attack.

The general, who headed the city's transport police until six months ago, and his family were ambushed while driving in the centre of the town, said police Colonel Adel Zain al-Abedin.

On Thursday morning, an unidentified armed group shot dead five Iraqi Oil Ministry security guards who were driving to the northern city of Kirkuk on Thursday, police said.

Lieutenant Jawaad Abdullah said they were shot in the town of Uthaim, south of Kirkuk. The attack came a day after a car bomb critically wounded six security guards for the state-owned North Oil Company in Kirkuk, an oil centre.

Sunnis to vote

Meanwhile, Iraqi member of parliament Mishaan al-Juburi told Aljazeera that the US offensive against predominantly Sunni towns in the central Anbar province was a repetition of similar tactics used ahead of the January 2005 elections.

''What we fear most in the governorates that contain mixed residents is the targeting of Sunni Arab neighbourhoods, in order to prevent Sunnis from attaining the two-thirds of the consensus required to vote down the [constitution] at the referendum," he said.

He lauded the role of the United Nations in pressing the Iraqi parliament to reverse last-minute electoral law changes.

The changes would have made it impossible for the draft constitution to be voted down in the 15 October referendum.

PHOTO CAPTION

An Iraqi cleans debris from inside mosque in Hilla. (AFP)

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