A series of bombings in Iraq, Thursday, have left at least 50 people
dead and over 100 wounded. Two suicide bombings in the town of Tal Afar, near
the Syrian border, and a bombing in Baghdad's Sadr City, come just over
a week after U.S. troops pulled out of Iraqi towns and cities.
It was a bloody day
in Iraq, Thursday, recalling some of the worst bombings of recent
years, with dozens of casualties in in explosions in Baghdad and the
northwestern border town of Tal Afar.
Witnesses say two suicide
bombers blew themselves up, minutes apart, in the northwestern town of
Tal Afar, near the Syrian border. The second explosion appeared to
target civilians who had gathered to help victims of the first bombing.
Tal
Afar is home to a large population of ethnic Turkmens, whose relations
with Iraq's sunni Arabs, in both neighboring Kirkuk and Mosul, have
been strained in recent years.
Police say a man working for Iraqi security forces, responsible for interrogating suspects of terrorist attacks, was the target.
A
heavy-set man, spattered with blood, explained that he had just
"married off his son," when events abruptly took a turn for the worse.
He says that he and others were at the wedding party, when a suicide bomber blew himself up among the guests.
Meanwhile,
there was a bombing in a vegetable market in Baghdad's mainly Shi'ite
district of Sadr City, with dozens of casualties.
Yet another
explosion, this time a roadside bombing, went off in Baghdad's Karrada
district, apparently aimed at the convoy of Iraq's central bank
governor. The governor was unhurt, by the blast.
All three top
Iraqi government security spokesman indicated, last week, that they
thought the Iraqi government now had security matters "under control."
Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki urged Iraqi citizens, recently, to cooperate
with the country's security forces to put a stop to terror attacks.
Efforts at reconciliation between Iraq's rival Shi'ite and Sunni
factions have continued since local elections last January.
Member
of parliament Hanin Qudwa told journalists that he thought that those
who were behind the recent explosions were trying to affect the
political process.
He says that those who are behind the
explosions, either on behalf of foreign parties or local parties, are
undoubtedly trying to influence the political process, and probably the upcoming parliamentary elections.
The recent rash of bombings
comes close to ten days after U.S. troops withdrew from Iraqi cities
and towns, according to a security pact signed last November with the
Iraqi government.
Meanwhile Iranian state media say U.S. forces
in Iraq have released five Iranian diplomats who were detained in 2007
on suspicion of helping Shi'ite Iraqi militants. U.S. forces had
detained the diplomats in the northern town of Irbil.
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