Los Angeles Times

HORROR IN IRAQ

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent.

A once-bustling market in Khan Bani Saad, north of Baghdad, lies in ruins the day after a suicide car bombing that killed more than 100. An Iraqi lawmaker said the attack carried a note of “disgusting sectariani­sm.”

BEIRUT — Iraqi officials on Saturday condemned a suicide car bomb that ripped into a bustling holiday market in an Iraqi town, killing more than 100 people, with one declaring that it carried a note of “disgusting sectariani­sm.”

The explosion, one of the deadliest recent attacks in the country, occurred late Friday in the Khales area of Khan Bani Saad, a town in Diyala province about 35 miles north of Baghdad. The timing of the detonation caught shoppers out in force for the Eid al-Fitr celebratio­n, which marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan.

Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity, saying in a statement that the attack had targeted a gathering of Popular Mobilizati­on Units. The predominan­tly Shiite Muslim militias have been instrument­al in the Iraqi government’s efforts to defeat the mainly Sunni Muslim Islamic State, which has seized a large swath of northern and western Iraq.

Pro-Islamic State ac- counts on Twitter uploaded pictures depicting a scene of chaos, including charred husks of cars and singed buildings in debris-strewn streets.

“We went out to the market for shopping and preparatio­ns for the holiday Eid in order to receive holiday cheer,” one resident, who spoke anonymousl­y for fear of retributio­n, told the Associated Press. “But this joy has turned to grief and we have lost family, friends and relatives, all because of this government’s failure to provide us with security.”

Officials told the news service that 170 people were injured.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi called the attack an “awful crime” that came as a response to the “victories achieved by heroic armed forces in all sectors.”

“The terrorist gangs will have no place in our country and we will get them,” Abadi said. “They will not escape from punishment and their criminalit­y will only increase our determinat­ion to pursue them in the battlefiel­ds.”

Other officials were quick to denounce the attack as an attempt to exacerbate sectarian hostility.

Salim Jaboori, speaker of the parliament, said the assault was an attempt “to shake the security of Diyala [province] by striking on the [note] of disgusting sectariani­sm.”

Islamic State views Shiites as “apostates” who are to be killed.

Despite espousing a particular­ly harsh interpreta­tion of Islamic law in areas under its control, Islamic State has often found allies in Sunni majority towns because of residents’ fear of the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

Its presence has proved to be resilient in Diyala, a mixed-sect province that forms the northern gateway to Baghdad and where security forces have long battled Sunni insurgents.

Islamic State is the latest incarnatio­n of the Al Qaeda organizati­on that was the nemesis of U.S. forces in particular from 2003 to 2008 during the American-led occupation of Iraq.

 ?? Karim Kadim
Associ a te d Press ??
Karim Kadim Associ a te d Press
 ?? Ahmad Al-Rubaye
AFP/Getty Images ?? IN KHAN BANI SAAD, vehicles sit near the market that was attacked the night before, when a suicide bomber struck as holiday shoppers crowded the area.
Ahmad Al-Rubaye AFP/Getty Images IN KHAN BANI SAAD, vehicles sit near the market that was attacked the night before, when a suicide bomber struck as holiday shoppers crowded the area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States