30 April 2009

Sattar Rahim

Reuters

BAGHDAD: At least 41 people were killed and 68 wounded on Wednesday when two car bombs ripped through a busy market in Baghdad's Sadr City slum, mowing down families as they crowded around a popular ice-cream parlor, police said. A third car bomb was discovered and was defused, the police said. After the blasts, angry residents threw stones and empty bottles at Iraqi soldiers and accused them of failing to protect people in Sadr City, a sprawling, largely Shiite slum.

The blasts followed two days of suicide bombings last week in which 150 people died, stirring fears Iraq could descend into a new spiral of sectarian conflict just as it appeared to be emerging from six years of bloodshed.

Body parts lay scattered around the smoking wreck of a car after the explosions, while the wounded were piled into private cars, minibuses and on the back of a pick-up truck and rushed to hospital. Police vehicles cleared a way for the convoy.

The nearby shops set ablaze by one of the explosions included the popular Aziz al-Kaabi ice-cream shop. Residents said it was usually crowded with families in the late afternoon, the time the bombs went off.

The second car bomb appeared to have exploded around 60 meters away near a part of the market specializing in birds and pets.

Sadr City is home to more than 2 million of Baghdad's poorest people and is a stronghold of support for anti-American Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. Many of last week's victims were Shiite pilgrims from Iran. The sectarian violence ignited by the 2003 US-led invasion has receded sharply over the past year but insurgents, including Sunni Islamist Al-Qaeda, continue to carry out suicide and car bombings in the oil-producing nation.

The targets of blasts in northeastern Diyala Province and Baghdad last week included a revered Shiite shrine, and many Iraqis fear a broader conflict if Shiite gunmen launch a wave of reprisal killings against Sunnis.

The government has pointed the finger of blame at Al-Qaeda and members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath party. It said its security forces managed last Thursday to arrest the leader of an Al-Qaeda-affiliated insurgent group, the Islamic State of Iraq.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said on Tuesday that the arrest of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi could provoke revenge attacks.

Many Iraqis worry the violence may increase as US forces prepare to withdraw from urban bases by the end of June and ahead of national elections due at the end of the year.

Copyright The Daily Star 2009.