Las Vegas Review-Journal

Iraq reeling from deadly bombings

Wave of violence follows al-qaida jail break

- By ADAM SCHRECK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAGHDAD — A bomb hidden in a pickup loaded with vegetables exploded in a market north of Baghdad, the deadlier of two vehicle bombings that killed 24 people in Iraq on Thursday.

The blasts in the city of Samarra and the Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib are the latest in a seemingly unrelentin­g wave of violence pounding Iraq a decade after the U.S.-led invasion. They follow car bombings and other attacks a day earlier that killed at least 82.

The truck bomb responsibl­e for most of Thursday’s deaths tore through a market in Samarra, killing 18 and wounding 32, according to police.

Samarra is a largely Sunni Muslim city that is home to a revered Shiite shrine. The 2006 bombing of the gold-domed al-Askari shrine by Sunni militants unleashed widespread sectarian bloodshed in what would come to be seen as the darkest chapter of the war.

Another car bomb went off Thursday in Abu Ghraib, on the western outskirts of Baghdad, killing six and wounding 15, according to police. Abu Ghraib is the site of the prison made infamous by prisoner abuse by U.S. personnel following the 2003 invasion.

A highly coordinate­d jailbreak by al-Qaida at the prison and another Baghdad-area lockup in July set free more than 500 inmates, including several militants.

Hospital officials confirmed Thursday’s casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the informatio­n.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity. AlQaida’s Iraq branch frequently detonates car bombs in areas with large numbers of civilians in the hopes of maximizing the number of casualties and underminin­g public confidence in the Shiite-led government.

More than 4,000 people have been killed in violent attacks in Iraq since the start of April, when the pace of killing accelerate­d to levels unseen since 2008.

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 ?? KHALID MOHAMMED/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mourners pray during a mass funeral Thursday at a Baghdad mosque for four men killed when a bomb in a parked car blew up Wednesday outside a coffee shop in a largely Sunni neighborho­od.
KHALID MOHAMMED/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mourners pray during a mass funeral Thursday at a Baghdad mosque for four men killed when a bomb in a parked car blew up Wednesday outside a coffee shop in a largely Sunni neighborho­od.

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