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Related story: Iraq's al-Qaida claims responsibility
for Baghdad attacks
BAGHDAD, Sept. 14 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi capital Baghdad has
turned into a city of violence again on Wednesday as insurgents embarked on a
killing spree by staging a series of deadly attacks, leaving more then 100
people dead and more wounded.
This outbreak of violence cast a darker shadow than its
precedent since there is just one month to go for a referendum on Iraq's draft
constitution, which has torn the already ravaged country further apart.
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| Iraqis cry as they sit next to the bodies
of victims outside a hospital in Baghdad Sept. 14.
(Xinhua) | Earlier Wednesday, a car
bomb rattled Baghdad's northern Kazimiyah district targeting a group of
construction workers at Oruba Square waiting to be hired for daily work. The
suicide bomber drove his car into the gathering before detonating the explosive
charge.
The death toll of the single explosion is over 80 and expected
to rise further, police said, adding 162 others were wounded.
In another attack, 17 people were killed near Baghdad by gunmen
disguised in police uniform early Wednesday, police said.
The gunmen dragged the 17 civilians out of their homes in Taji,
15 km north of Baghdad, and shot them dead in what is believed to be another
killing aroused by sectarian hatred in the country.
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| An Iraqi man cries outside a hospital
following a suicide attack. (AFP) |
Two more suicide car bombs rocked Baghdad's Adel and Shala
districts Wednesday morning, killing seven people and wounding 26 others,
interior ministry sources told Xinhua.
At about noontime, a car bomb blew up near a police patrol in
Baghdad's northern district of Adhamiyah, killing two policemen and wounding
another.
The al-Qaida wing in Iraq has claimed responsibility for the
series of bombings on Wednesday, saying they are in retaliation for the joint
US-Iraq military offensive against insurgents in the northern restive town of
Tal Afar, according to an Internet statement.
The US-Iraqi forces launched a major offensive since Saturday in
Tal Afar near the Syrian border to rid the restive town of Sunni insurgents and
foreign fighters blamed for violence in the country. The military said they have
killed over one hundred insurgents and captured more in the operation.
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| Local residents look at an automobile
destroyed by a suicide car bombing in a residential part of Baghdad Sept.
14. (Xinhua) |
The operation is launched as Iraq is heading to the referendum
on constitution on Oct. 15, although negotiators representing different ethnic
and sectarian groups failed to see eye to eye on key issues like federalism and
sharing of oil revenues and water resources.
Technical departments have warned that time is running out for
printing and distributing five million copies of constitution to families for
review before they decide what to say to the basic law, while insurgents are
bent on derailing the political process by hitting targets as they see fit to
suit their goals.
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| A wounded man is treated in hospital
in Baghdad Sept.
14. (Xinhua/AFP) | As violence
rampaged across the country, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani ruled out on Tuesday
a timetable for the withdrawal of US troops, backing away from his earlier
remarks that the United States could pull out its 50,000 troops by the end of
the year.
"We will set no timetable for a withdrawal. A timetable will
help the terrorists and encourage them that they could defeat a superpower of
the world and Iraqi people," Talabani told a press conference after talks with
US President George W. Bush at the White House.
"We hope that by the end of 2006 our security forces are up to
the level of taking responsibility from many American troops with complete
agreement with the Americans," Talabani said.
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| Iraqi soliders guand the blast site.(Xinhua/AFP photo) | The Bush administration has been carefully avoiding a timetable
to slash US troops in Iraq, currently about 140,000, and the Pentagon plans to
maintain or slightly increase the force level in anticipation of the Oct. 15
referendum.
White House officials said that Bush's strategy for eventually
withdrawing troops depends on Iraqis' approving the constitution and holding
successful elections in December. Enditem |