Suicide Bomber Targets Iraqi Kids
Up To 27 Killed By Blast Near Troops Handing Out Candy And Toys
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Play CBS Video Video Child Coffins In Baghdad After a suicide bomber targeted a U.S. patrol swarming with children, Kimberly Dozier reports it may have been a message that militants will strike anyone -- even a child -- who mixes with the enemy.
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Video Young Victim Of Iraqi Bomb CBS News Correspondent Kimberly Dozier gives a personal account of a recent car bombing in Iraq that claimed the lives of nearby children.
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A young victim on the operating table following the bombing. (CBS)
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Injured woman with baby following car bomb blast in Baghdad video still. (AP /APTN)
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Iraqis inspect the damage after the blast. (AP /APTN)
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Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
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Interactive Attacks Map Details on the insurgency and terrorism that has continued to take lives since the fall of Saddam.
An elderly woman dressed in black beat her chest in front of her house. Others meandered about in the broiling heat, seeming dazed.
In Washington, White House press secretary Scott McClellan strongly condemned the bombing, saying it showed insurgents “have no regard for innocent, human life whether it's men, women or children.”
At least 1,759 members of the U.S. military have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003.
At least 983 people have been killed by car bombers or suicide bombers on foot since the new government was announced on April 28, according to an Associated Press count. At least 2,633 have been wounded in those attacks.
In September 2004, 35 Iraqi children were killed as bombs exploded while American troops handed out candy at a government-sponsored celebration to inaugurate a Baghdad sewage plant. It marked the largest death toll of children in an insurgent attack since the Iraq conflict began.
Later Wednesday, about 200 people turned out for the funeral of five victims, in keeping with Muslim tradition to bury the dead quickly. The crowd shouted “Allahu akbar!” — “God is great — and some fired weapons in the air.
The bomber used a brown Toyota Land Cruiser with a license plate from the southern city of Basra, police said.
It was the second major suicide bombing in Baghdad this week. A suicide bomber killed 25 people Sunday at an army recruiting center.
In a separate Baghdad attack Wednesday, a roadside bomb exploded near an American patrol, killing a 7-year-old child and seriously wounding a woman, police said.
Last Friday, Maj. Gen. William G. Webster Jr., commander of U.S. forces in Baghdad, said American and Iraqi troops soldiers have “mostly eliminated” the ability of insurgents to conduct sustained, high-intensity attacks in the capital.
However, U.S. and Iraqi authorities acknowledge eliminating such attacks entirely is all but impossible.
U.S. officials have urged the Shiites in government to reach out to the Sunnis, believing only a political strategy can end the insurgency.
But a negotiated solution has proved difficult as mainstream Sunni groups complain of brutality by Shiite-dominated security forces. Sunni Arabs are believed to comprise about 20 percent of the country's 27 million people.
Early Wednesday, Iraqi security forces stormed several houses across Baghdad, detaining, torturing and killing 11 Sunni Arab men, including a cleric, the Sunni clerical Association of Muslim Scholars said.
The bodies were found later in the day in a Shiite neighborhood, said an association official, Sheik Hassan Sabri Salman. The government's Sunni Endowments, which cares for Sunni mosques, also reported the deaths.
Sunni groups also accused security forces of allowing at least nine Sunnis detained last weekend to die after locking them for hours in a van without ventilation as temperatures soared to 115 degrees.
The Iraqi Interior Ministry said both allegations are being investigated, and if true, those responsible will be punished.
Also Wednesday, at least three Iraqi soldiers were killed in two shootouts in Baghdad.
© MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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