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Bomber Kills 9 At Iraq President's HQ

A suicide bomber killed nine people at the party headquarters of the Iraqi president, as fierce gunbattles between supporters of an anti-American Shiite cleric and Iraqi forces left at least seven people dead Tuesday, officials said.

The suicide bomber blew up his bomb-rigged truck in the car park of the headquarters of Iraqi President Jalal Talabani's party, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, in the northern city of Mosul.

At least five civilians and four Kurdish security personnel, known as Peshmergas, were killed, said police Col. Abdul-Kareem Ahmed al-Jibouri. He said 41 people were injured in the blast, which damaged the one-story office building and set 17 cars on fire.

Mosul is 225 miles northwest of Baghdad.

In the southern city of Karbala, Shiite gunmen and security forces exchanged gunfire for several hours Tuesday near one of Iraq's holiest shrines containing the mausoleum of Hussein, a revered figure in Shiite history. The fighting was sparked by a raid by Iraqi soldiers on the cleric's offices.

In other developments:

  • Car bombs triggered gas explosions in a Shiite neighborhood two days ago, the U.S. said Tuesday, acknowledging that the attack was due to a hostile act. At least 63 Iraqis were killed and 140 wounded in the series of explosions Sunday night in Zafraniyah. Iraqi officials said the blasts were due to car bombs and a rocket attack from a Sunni neighborhood under U.S. control. But U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, insisted Monday that American experts had concluded that there was "no evidence" of anything other than a "significant gas explosion."
  • The head of the main Sunni bloc in parliament called Tuesday for the Sunni speaker of parliament to step down to help the stability of the unity government after Shiite and Kurdish parties insisted on his removal. The speaker, Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, has stirred controversy by speaking out against regional self-rule, strongly supported by Shiites and Kurds but opposed by many Sunnis. He also suggested that U.S. soldiers should be punished for killing Iraqis who fought against the occupation.
  • American journalist Jill Carroll is talking publicly for the first time about being held hostage in Iraq for 82 days. She said her captors accused her of being "a spy, or Jewish, or hiding a homing device."

    The fighting in the relatively peaceful Shiite-dominated south presents a new headache for the unity government of Iraq and U.S. troops trying to control a Sunni insurgency and sectarian fighting between Shiites and Sunnis.

    The violence, which has occurred mostly in the predominantly Sunni provinces in and around Baghdad, has surged since a Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite mosque. The sectarian violence is claiming more than 1,000 lives every month around Baghdad alone.

    Karbala Health Directorate official said three security force members and four gunmen were killed, while 17 people were wounded in the Karbala fighting. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media.

    The fighting spread over at least five neighborhoods of Karbala around the office of Mahmoud al-Hassani, a cleric who came into prominence after the ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

    The fiercely anti-American al-Hassani is believed to have several thousand followers. His whereabouts have remained unknown since his office was raided in 2004 by Polish soldiers, part of the U.S.-led coalition force.

    But his followers were out in force Tuesday, wielding AK-47 rifles, heavy machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades that they fired at army patrols before running away. Soldiers fired at groups of gunmen roaming the streets.

    The trouble started after Iraqi soldiers raided al-Hassani's office before dawn, apparently in search of weapons. Ahmed al-Ghazali, an aide to the cleric, said the raid resulted because al-Hassani's supporters taking over a field behind the building for security reasons.

    The raid set off the gun battles, which raged for several hours despite an indefinite curfew in Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad.

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