AP/ February 11, 2009, 1:53 PM

Dozens Killed In Iraq Suicide Blast

A suicide bomber struck a crowded restaurant in northern Iraq on Thursday where Kurdish officials were meeting with Arab tribal leaders to discuss long-standing ethnic tensions, killing at least 55 people, police said.

It appeared to be the deadliest attack in Iraq in nearly six months.

Kirkuk, the center of Iraq's northern oil fields, has seen fewer attacks than other regions such as Baghdad but remains the focus of years of competition and political wrangling among ethnic groups with rival claims to the city.

Police Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir, who gave the casualty figures, said the blast occurred in the Abdullah Restaurant just north of the contested oil city. He said 120 people were wounded and that the dead included five women and three children.

A Kurdish official said Arab tribal leaders were having lunch with members of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the party of President Jalal Talabani.

They were to attend a meeting with Talabani after the lunch to discuss ways to defuse tensions among Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen in the Kirkuk area.

The restaurant was also packed with families celebrating the final day of the Eid al-Adha religious holiday. It is affiliated with another Kirkuk restaurant of the same name, which was attacked by a car bomb in 2007 that killed six people and wounded 25.

A guard at the entrance said the blast occurred moments after a man parked his car and walked inside. The man was not searched because the guards had not been told to frisk customers, he said. The guard spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears for his own safety.

(AP / CBS)
At the city's main hospital, family members wept and screamed in the blood-smeared corridors as doctors tried to save lives. Many of the victims were horrifically wounded and mangled bodies of the dead lay unattended on the emergency room floor.

Salam Abdullah, a 45-year-old Kurd, said he was having lunch with his wife when they saw shrapnel flying through the room.

"I held my wife and led her outside the place. As we were leaving, I saw dead bodies soaked with blood and huge destruction," he said. "We waited outside the restaurant for some minutes. Then an ambulance took us to the hospital."

Abdullah was hit in his head and left hand while his wife was wounded in her head and chest.

Awad al-Jubouri, 53, one of the tribal leaders at the luncheon, said he heard a huge explosion "and I felt that my chest was bleeding."

"I do not know how a group like al Qaeda claiming to be Islamic plans to attack and kill people on sacred days like Eid," he said. "We were only meeting to discuss our problems with the Kurds and trying to impose peace among Muslims in Kirkuk."

The Kurds want to annex Kirkuk and surrounding Tamim province into their self-ruled region in northern Iraq. Most Turkomen and Arabs want the province to remain under central government control, fearing the Kurds would discriminate against them.

Iraq's parliament exempted the Kirkuk area from next month's provincial elections because the different ethnic groups could not agree on how to share power there.

Iraq's constitution provides for a referendum to be held in Kirkuk to determine whether it would be annexed to the Kurdish regional administration. But the vote has been repeatedly postponed because of fears that the balloting would worsen ethnic tension.

Elsewhere, the U.S. military said Thursday that American troops launched raids in at least four Iraqi cities, detaining six people believed to be associated with al Qaeda in Iraq.

A U.S. statement said two men were detained Wednesday in a pair of raids near Tarmiyah, 30 miles north of Baghdad.

Two others were captured Thursday in Ramadi, capital of Anbar province west of Baghdad, the statement said. The two others were arrested Thursday - one in Mosul and the other in Baghdad, the U.S. said.

U.S. troops have broad authority under a U.N. mandate to apprehend people deemed a security threat and hold them indefinitely without charge.

However, the mandate expires at the end of this month and will be replaced by a U.S.-Iraqi security agreement that requires the U.S. to obtain warrants to search houses or detain people except in active combat.

The new regulations will be part of a series of major changes in the five-year U.S.-led mission.

Britain announced Wednesday it will withdraw all but a handful of its 4,000 soldiers from Iraq next year. The U.S. is expected to shift a brigade to Basra in southern Iraq, where most of the British forces are located, to ensure the security of supply lines into the country from Kuwait.

U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has called for withdrawing all U.S. combat troops from Iraq by early 2010, shifting responsibility to the Iraqis for the defense of the country against Sunni and Shiite extremists.
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
21 Comments Add a Comment
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motown67usa says:
Kirkuk has largely gone unreported. While violence is down up to 80-90% in most of the country, violence in that city has dropped only 28%. There has been little to no change in the number of attacks during 2008. In fact, per capita, Kirkuk has twice as many attacks as Baghdad. At the root of the problem is the ethnic division in the province. The Kurds hope to annex Kirkuk, while the Arabs and Turkomen are opposed. There was suppose to be a census and vote on the future of the city by the end of 2007, which was extended to June 08, but nothing has happened. The U.S. and U.N. are now hoping to have some sort of mediate compromise on its future, but there is little to no movement. Until there is, violence will continue there. For more see: http://musingsoniraq.blogspot.com/2008/11/two-reports-on-trying-to-solve-kirkuk.html
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petro49l says:
Baghdad should change its policy on military affairs. The nation needs a strong police force not soldiers, tanks, and missiles. Law enforcement requires strategies that capture Felons. Al Qada is a crime syndicate. A national police force would eliminate narcotics traffick. Without drug sales, Bin Laden has no source of revenue.
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ajaxtheleast says:
In his last comment about the Iraq war

George allowed that there were two items that

deserved having the word "too" prefacing them,,,

"too" long and "too" expensive.

Evidently the number of mutilations and deaths

were either right on the bubble or they fell

below what George figured needed

defined by the word "too".

"GOT ME A GREAT IDEA,,,MY SON GEORGE HERE?,,
,,,OUR NEXT PRESIDENT?,,,,WHATTA YA THINK?
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liberalme says:
Wait!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I thought we won whatever it is we were supposed to win over there---and when you win something, isn''t it "game over"?

Is it over? Did we win?
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downsteamjim says:
noloyalista: I hope you do not allow your children to throw burning gasoline on policeman. Get a sheet and a cross and play with fire in your backyard.
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downsteamjim says:
Pythoncharely: Do you realize that most people think murdering innocent people is wrong? There are probably Muslims who think spilling blood for fun is wrong. Get a life and stop agreeing with this type of behavior.
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noloyalisti says:
Tell Obama and your Congress person to end this madness now! This is a huge tragic mistake and all we are doing is practice terrorism there. Time to stand up to the corporations who run the government and military. If they don''t stop we start GENERAL STRIKES. The people of Greece have it right.
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bailthisout says:
- the fact that hopefully soon our US Military service members will be leaving makes myself believe that the Surge worked. Posted by BailThisOut at 11:45 AM : Dec 11, 2008

Even though very few of those benchmarks were actually met. Typical...
---------------------------------
Posted by ThinkHarder

You are correct, but I really do not care about the benchmarks being met. All that matters is that American Forces will be withdrawn from Iraq in the next couple of years.
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petro49l says:
Hey freedomobama, put away your hashish. Al Qada Iraq has lost its war against America.
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petro49l says:
Iraq does not need a military. The nation must develop a modern police state. Baghdad''s Enemies are within. Those who enter the country from Syria or Iran as militants assimilate into a crime syndicate. Tanks, rockets, and missiles are not very important. A good SWAT team in every district would eliminate Al Qada.
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