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Friday, December 12, 2008

Bomber kills 70 at restaurant outside Kirkuk


Deadliest attack in 6 months

By ROBERT H. REID | Associated Press Writer
6:42 PM CST, December 11, 2008

BAGHDAD (AP) — A suicide bomber killed at least 55 people Thursday in a packed restaurant near the northern city of Kirkuk where Kurdish officials and Arab tribal leaders were trying to reconcile their differences over control of the oil-rich region. The brazen attack — the deadliest in Iraq in six months — occurred at a time of rising tension between Kurds and Arabs over oil, political power and Kirkuk.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack at the upscale Abdullah restaurant, which was crowded with families celebrating the end of the four-day Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha. The U.S. blamed the blast on al-Qaida, which uses suicide bombings as its signature attack.

Police Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir, who gave the casualty figures, said the dead included at least five women and three children. About 120 people were wounded.

It appeared, however, that the target was a reconciliation meeting between Arab tribal leaders and officials of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the Kurdish party of President Jalal Talabani, on ways to defuse tension among Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen in the Kirkuk area.

Kurds want to annex Kirkuk and surrounding Tamim province into their self-ruled region of northern Iraq. Most Turkomen and Arabs want the province to remain under central government control, fearing the Kurds would discriminate against them.

Iraq's parliament exempted the Kirkuk area from next month's provincial elections because the different ethnic groups could not agree on how to share power.

A guard at the entrance said the blast occurred moments after a man parked his car and walked inside. He was not searched because the guards had not been told to frisk customers, the guard said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears for his own safety.

At the city's main hospital, family members wept and screamed in the blood-smeared corridors as doctors tried to save lives. Many victims were horrifically wounded, and mangled bodies lay unattended on the emergency room floor.

Salam Abdullah, a 45-year-old Kurd, said he was having lunch with his wife when they saw shrapnel flying through the room.

"I held my wife and led her outside the place. As we were leaving, I saw dead bodies soaked with blood and huge destruction," he said. Abdullah was wounded in his head and left hand; his wife suffered head and chest injuries.

"I do not know how a group like al-Qaida claiming to be Islamic plans to attack and kill people on sacred days like Eid," said Awad al-Jubouri, 53, one of the tribal leaders at the luncheon. "We were only meeting to discuss our problems with the Kurds and trying to impose peace among Muslims in Kirkuk."

The attack was the deadliest in Iraq since June 7, when a car bomb killed 63 people in a Shiite neighborhood of Baghdad.

U.S. officials say attacks are down 80 percent nationwide since March, though major bombings still occur. A double truck bombing killed 17 people on Dec. 4 in the former Sunni insurgent stronghold of Fallujah west of Baghdad.

It was unclear what effect Thursday's attack would have on reconciliation efforts in Kirkuk, since the victims included both Arabs and Kurds. Mass attacks against civilians have prompted many Sunnis to turn against the insurgency.

But ethnic competition is intense in Kirkuk and elsewhere in the volatile north, the most ethnically mixed part of the country.

The U.N. mission, which has been trying to defuse tension in Kirkuk, urged community leaders "to demonstrate responsible leadership and to urge restraint by their followers at this difficult time."

In a joint statement, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker and the top U.S. commander Gen. Ray Odierno condemned the bombing and accused al-Qaida of trying to "divide Iraqi communities" and halt the progress toward "a stable, inclusive and tolerant society."

U.S. commanders have long believed that resolving differences among the ethnic communities is the key to defeating the insurgents in the north because al-Qaida and the dozen other Sunni extremist groups there exploit those tensions.

But progress has been difficult because of deep-seated suspicions and conflicting claims on Kirkuk, the center of Iraq's vast northern oil fields which the Kurds have long wanted to bring into their autonomous region.

Kirkuk has been hit by at least 41 suicide attacks since May 2005, according to an Associated Press tally. The deadliest attack occurred July 17, 2007, when a suicide truck bomber struck a Kurdish political office, killing at least 80 and wounding more than 180.

Iraq's constitution provides for a referendum to be held in Kirkuk to determine whether it would be annexed to the Kurdish regional administration. But the vote has been repeatedly postponed because of fears that the balloting would worsen ethnic tension.

At the same time, relations between the Kurds and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki have worsened because of differences over control of oil resources, Kirkuk and power-sharing.

A draft law to regulate the oil industry has been stalled for nearly two years because the Kurds withdrew their support, maintaining it gave too much control to the national government.

The Kurds also want a bigger say in decision-making within the ruling coalition.

Al-Maliki has accused the Kurds of breaking the law by sending Kurdish troops outside the self-ruled region, ostensibly to protect Kurdish communities in central government territory.

___

Associated Press reporters Yahya Barzanji in Sulaimaniyah, Sameer N. Yacoub in Baghdad and the AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this report.


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class="categorypage_headline IraqSide">IraqSide:Developments

class="postcallout">Update
class="postheadline">Witness: Kirkuk Blast Killed at Least 70

class="postsubheadline">Man who helped pull survivors out of the scene says official numbers too low

class="postbyline"> Posted 11 hr. 12 min. ago
class="inlinephoto_full" style="width: 478px; float: left;">
class="captionspace" style="width: 478px;">
class="postphotocredit">Kirkuk Photo: Daniel W. Smith






BAGHDAD – There was a suicide bomb in a popular restaurant in Kirkuk on Thursday, with official numbers of dead between 40 and 50, and as many as 100 wounded.


Iraqslogger spoke to a witness, an English teacher, who requested that his name not be used. He heard the huge explosion from down the street. He ran to the Abdallah restaurant, which is frequented by political figures, police chiefs, military commanders, and other VIPs, to find almost complete destruction. He reported seeing much blood, and body after body on the floor.


He helped carry wounded people to safety, and was present at the site, throughout the preliminary investigation. He agreed with the estimation of 100 wounded, but insisted that he saw at least 70 dead.
It is a commonly accepted notion throughout Iraq that official figures of dead and wounded in such incidents are usually if not always deflated, in the interest of showing that security is under control.


There is speculation that the target of the blast was a group of local council members at the restaurant from Huweija, just outside of Kirkuk. Aswat al-Iraq quotes Brig. Sarhad Qader, the Kirkuk Districts’ Police Department chief as saying, “There’s a possibility that news of the presence of Huweija council members inside the restaurant were leaked to armed groups like al-Qaeda or Ansar al-Islam.” On Wednesday night, the Iraqi Al-Rafadin satellite television channel reported that Ansar al-Aslam claimed responsibility for destroying an American humvee in Hawija.



The English teacher said, “All the city is stressed and confused by the bombing. It has had a really big effect on people.”



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KIRKUK, Iraq – Muslim clerics appealed for calm Friday, one day after a suicide bomber killed 55 people — including women and children — at a local restaurant in the deadliest attack in Iraq in six months.

The attack appeared aimed at a meeting of local Kurdish, Arab and Turkomen leaders who had gathered at the Abdullah restaurant to discuss ways to reduce ethnic tension in this oil-rich city.

But many of the victims had simply come to the restaurant with their families to celebrate the end of the four-day Islamic holiday of Eid al-Adha.

"Yesterday, the terrorists killed innocent people regardless of their religious and ethnic background," Serwan Ahmed, a Kurdish preacher, told 900 worshippers at the Iskan mosque.

"Thus, all the groups living in Kirkuk should be united and work together to enhance peace and solidarity. We must deprive the terrorists from the chance to create more tension in the city," he added.

At another mosque, preacher Hussein Zangana said al-Qaida "murdered" people who were simply enjoying the religious holiday.

"The terrorists are trying to kill innocent people whether they are Kurds or Arabs," he said.

Most of the victims were buried late Thursday. In keeping with local customs, neighbors of the dead joined families of the victims in digging graves in city cemeteries.

By Friday morning, however, markets and restaurants were open again. Black banners hung on many walls, serving as a grim reminder of the bombing.

The deadly attack occurred at a time of tension between Kurds and Arabs over Kirkuk, the center of Iraq's northern oil fields. Kurds want to annex Kirkuk and surrounding Tamim province into their self-ruled region of northern Iraq.

Most Turkomen and Arabs want the province to remain under central government control, fearing the Kurds would discriminate against them.

Iraq's parliament exempted the Kirkuk area from provincial elections to be held on Jan. 31 because the different ethnic groups could not agree on how to share power.

President Jalal Talabani's party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, sponsored the reconciliation luncheon. Talabani had planned to meet with the group later in the day.

The president, who is Kurdish, later issued a statement saying that the "terrorists and their groups" would never "destroy the great security gains achieved across the country."

Among the dead was a locally popular Turkomen singer who was killed along with his three children, newly married brother and sister-in-law.

Kanaan Mohammed Saleh, 39, who hosted a show called "The Sweet Voice" on a Kurdish television channel, had been invited to the restaurant to attend the reconciliation meeting.

He took his wife, Bushra, three young children and his newly married brother and sister-in-law. All were killed except the wife, who was seriously injured, according to the singer's brother Karim Mohammed Saleh.

"We never expected such a thing to happen, especially at a restaurant outside the city," the brother said as he received mourners at a funeral tent. "After this loss, life has become without meaning or taste for me. I cannot cope with this disaster."

Lt. Col. David Doherty, spokesman for U.S. forces in northern Iraq, said the bomber used a suicide vest packed with metal to maximize casualties. The bomber apparently detonated the vest near a fountain at the center of the main dining area where most of the people were killed, he said.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but U.S. officials suspected al-Qaida in Iraq. Two other groups that operate in the north, Ansar al-Sunnah and Ansar al-Islam, have used suicide attacks during the five-year war.

Provincial police chief Brig. Gen. Jamal Tahir said the identity of the bomber and details about how he managed to pass the checkpoints leading to the restaurant were under investigation.

"We know that al-Qaida is always trying to find and make use of weak points in any security system," he said.

___

Associated Press writer Sameer N. Yacoub in Baghdad contributed to this report.

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IraqSide:Buzz

The Latest
Hawija Official: "I Was Target of Kirkuk Blast"

Provincial Arab Leader Accuses "Foreign and Internal Agents" in Deadly Attack

Posted 6 hr. 5 min. ago
Husayn Ali-Salih, head of the Arab Unity political bloc in Kirkuk province and president of the Hawija municipal council.
Newsmatique.

Husayn Ali-Salih, head of the Arab Unity political bloc in Kirkuk province and president of the Hawija municipal council.




As a cloud of uncertainty hangs over the circumstances of yesterday's deadly suicide bombing that killed over 50 people north of Kirkuk city, one local official who was present at the scene said that he was the intended target of the blast.


Husayn Ali Salih, the head of the Hawija municipal council and head of the Arab Unity Bloc in Kirkuk province, insisted in an interview Friday that he had been the intended target of the blast, Radio Sawa reports in Arabic.



The explosion at a restaurant on the road between Kirkuk and Arbil city targeted him personally, Salih said in the interview with the US-funded broadcaster.


The purpose of the meeting was to pursue rapprochement between the political forces in Kirkuk province, he said.


"Five of my guards were wounded as a result" of the blast the Hawija official said.


Salih accused "foreign and internal intelligence agents (mukhabarat) as lying behind the attack," without specifying further details


Hawija is a predominantly Sunni Arab district of Kirkuk province located about 30 miles southwest of Kirkuk city.





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Blasts in N. Iraqi oil city kill up to 25 -sources

19 May 2011 10:28

Source: reuters // Reuters
110519-kirkuk

Flames are seen at the Baba Gurgur oil field in Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, August 10, 2010. REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani

* Three bombs explode near government buildings

* Volatile city of Kirkuk is potential flashpoint

(Updates toll, adds details, quotes and background)

By Mustafa Mahmoud

KIRKUK, Iraq, May 19 (Reuters) - Three bombs targeting Iraqi security forces exploded near government buildings in the centre of Iraq's disputed northern oil city of Kirkuk on Thursday, killing up to 25 people and injuring scores, sources said.

Kirkuk, whose population is a volatile mix of Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen and others, lies amid some of the world's richest oil reserves and is a potential flashpoint as U.S. troops prepare to withdraw from Iraq by the end of the year, more than eight years after the invasion that removed Saddam Hussein.

A small bomb stuck to a police officer's car exploded near police headquarters, followed by two big car bomb blasts as security forces and rescuers rushed to the scene during the attack officials blamed on al Qaeda affiliates.

"I was on my way into police headquarters and suddenly I fell to the ground, but did not feel anything because I lost consciousness," said Talib Jabar, a policeman whose hands and feet were injured. "When I woke up I found myself in the hospital with doctors around me and I was bleeding everywhere."


Television footage showed the twisted and burnt wreckage of cars in the street as police officers picked through the debris. A local hospital was filled with the injured.

"There were three explosions that targeted the security forces near the local government buildings," Hassan Turan, the head of the Kirkuk provincial council, told Reuters.

"The first was a sticky bomb on a car of a police officer, followed by a car bomb targeting the police who gathered near the car," Turan said. "Afterwards there was a second car bomb that exploded in the same place."

Turan put the death toll at 17 with dozens injured but an Interior Ministry source and a hospital source said there were 25 dead and 68 wounded.

"We expect the death toll to rise because most of the wounded are serious cases," the hospital source said.

AL QAEDA ALLIES

The third bomb, which went off not far from the first two, targeted Colonel Oras Mohammed, the head of Kirkuk's counter-terrorism unit, the Interior Ministry source said. He was not hurt but four of his bodyguards were killed.

Major-General Jamal Tahir, the police chief in Kirkuk province, blamed al Qaeda in Iraq for the attack.

"It is a joint operation between al Qaeda and the armed groups allied with them ... it is an al Qaeda technique," he said. "Certainly, al Qaeda is behind today's explosions."


Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, is at the heart of a long dispute between Iraq's central government and the semi-autonomous Kurdish region, which lays claim to the city and its oil riches.

U.S. military commanders consider Kirkuk a potential trouble spot as they withdraw about 47,000 remaining American troops from Iraq by Dec. 31 under a security pact between the two countries.

Violence has declined sharply since the height of Iraq's sectarian conflict four years ago but bombings and other attacks remain a daily occurrence as Iraq battles a weakened Sunni Islamist insurgency and Shi'ite militias.

Iraqi forces have been on high alert for revenge attacks since U.S. commandos killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan earlier this month. Iraq has been a key al Qaeda battlefield since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. (Additional reporting by Muhanad Mohammed and Aseel Kami in Baghdad; Writing by Jim Loney; editing by Andrew Dobbie)

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