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| Iraqis mourn over the body of an Iraqi who
was killed in a car bomb explosion in the northern city of Tikrit.
Insurgents stepped up attacks in Iraq killing at least 42 people in two
suicide car bombings. | BAGHDAD, May 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Insurgents carried out
a series of deadly assaults in Iraq on Friday, killing at least 40 people as
United States forces claimed a heavy blow to Iraq's most wanted man, Abu Musad
al-Zarqawi.
In the deadliest attack on Friday, a suicide car bomb
detonatedat a crowded market in Suwayrah, some 50 km south of Baghdad, killing
at least 22 people and injuring more than 40 others.
The mostly Shi'ite city lies in an area where Sunni
militants have staged dozens of assaults on the fledging Iraqi security forces,
reinforcing fears such attacks may lead to a civil war.
The deadly attack came after another suicide bomber
blew up a booby-trapped car at a checkpoint in the northern city of Tikrit, the
hometown of former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein, killing seven policemen and
wounding several others.
"A suicide bomber drove an explosive-laden vehicle
into a police bus near a checkpoint manned by Iraqi army and policemen ona
bridge in Tikrit," Col. Hassan Ahmed told Xinhua.
In the northern city of Mosul, a car bomb hit a
police patrol, killing four police commandos and five passers-by, police said.
The latest insurgent attacks were part of at least 18
suicide bombings that have caused about 500 casualties since the transitional
government was approved by the parliament a week ago,casting doubts over the new
government's ability to calm down the instability.
Also on Friday, Iraqi police said that they found 14
bodies whohad been shot dead and buried in northeastern Baghdad.
Some of the bodies, which were believed to be Iraqis,
were blindfolded and had been shot in the head, the police said.
A US military spokesman confirmed the incident, but
did not give further information.
Many dead bodies had been found in several areas in
Iraq, mostly for police and security forces, as disturbance and violencesurged
in the country after the US-led invasion in 2003.
Iraqi officials often blame such attacks on the
elusive al Qaeda leader in Iraq, Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, whose
group has claimed responsibility for Friday's Tikrit bombing.
"A lion from the martyrs' brigade attacked a group of
the apostate police, who are agents of America, in the city of Tikrit ...
killing many," said a statement from Al Qaeda Organization for Holy War in Iraq
on an Islamist Web site.
However, the US military said it
had captured or killed more than 20 top lieutenants and other senior members to
Zarqawi in recent months, an apparent heavy blow to the notorious
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| The body of an Iraqi who was killed in
a car bomb explosion in the northern city of Tikrit was moved onto a
truck. |
militant atlarge.
Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari's office also
said Friday the security forces had collected significant information on
Zarqawi's terror network in Iraq through the confessions of hisdriver.
In a statement, the office said that Zarqawi's driver
shed light on the weakness of the terror network as a result of the capture and
killing of many leaders of the terror groups in Iraq by the security forces.
The driver confessed that the Iraqi security forces
were about to capture Zarqawi near the Euphrates River in the area between
Haditha and Hit on Feb. 20, the statement said.
Zarqawi, with a bounty of 25 million dollars on his
head, had managed to escape whereas his driver was seized along with Zarqawi's
personal computer.
Further information provided by the driver might lead
to the capture of other key elements in the network, the statement said, adding
he also disclosed the external resources for the terrorist groups.
In other developments, kidnappers of an Australian
hostage has set a 72-hour ultimatum for Australia to start withdrawing its
troops from Iraq, the Qatar-based al-Jazeera TV channel reported Friday.
The TV news channel, showing footage of Australian
Douglas Wood,said "the group calling itself the Shura Council of the
Mujahedeenof Iraq, which is holding Australian hostage Douglas Wood, gave
Australian authorities 72 hours to start withdrawing their forces from Iraq."
The TV station did not specify what the militants
would do if their deadline isn't met, but a number of previous hostages have
been killed.
Earlier in the day, the Australian authorities said a
task force that rushed to Baghdad this week had established Wood is still alive.
Meanwhile, The TV news channel reported that six
Jordanians working in Iraq have been kidnapped by a militant group named itself
as al-Bara bin Malik Brigades.
The six hostages, shown seated on the floor holding
their passports, were said to have been working with the US-led forces in Iraq.
The militant group warned Jordanian companies against working with US forces.
More than 200 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq
since Saddam Hussein's regime collapsed in April 2003. Some of the kidnappers
have sought ransom, while others pursued political motives such as the
withdrawal of foreign companies and troops from Iraq. Enditem |