Bomber Kills Shiite Pilgrims In Baghdad
At Least 35 Dead, 65 Wounded In Suicide Attack On Lead-Up To Holy Day Of Ashura
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Iraqi Shiites attend Friday prayers at the shrine of Imam Mousa al-Kazim in Baghdad, Iraq in this Jan. 4, 2008 file photo. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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Fast Facts Iraq Learn about the people, economy and history.
The attack during one of the holiest periods for Shiite Muslims came just as Iraqi forces took the lead on security under an agreement with the United States that went into effect on New Year's Day. Under that agreement, U.S. forces take a back seat on security issues in much of the country following the Dec. 31 expiration of a U.N. mandate for foreign troops.
The bomber blew herself up a short distance from the shrine of Imam Mousa al-Kazim, one of the holiest men in Shiite Islam, the army said, adding that many Iranian pilgrims were among the casualties.
The office of Iraqi army spokesman Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi said a woman wearing an explosives vest was responsible for the attack, which occurred just before noon in the northern Shiite neighborhood of Kazimiyah.
The attack came as Shiites prepared to mark Ashura on Jan. 7. Falling on the 10th of Muharram under the Islamic lunar calendar, it is one of the most important holy days for Shiite Muslims and marks the death of the Prophet Muhammad's grandson Imam Hussein. The first 10 days of Muharram are often marked by pilgrimages to holy sites around Iraq culminating in the Shiite holy city of Karbala.
The Iraqi police and army have deployed thousands of forces to safeguard worshippers, mostly those heading to Karbala south of Baghdad. The city is home to the golden-domed mosques of Imam Hussein and his half-brother Imam Abbas. Hundreds of thousands are expected to pour into the city Tuesday and Wednesday night for the pinnacle of the pilgrimage.
Maj. Gen. Othman Ali Farhood al-Ghanimy, the Iraqi army commander in Karbala, said last week that thousands of foreign pilgrims had arrived for the holy day - including many from neighboring predominantly Shiite Iran.
Although the suicide attack bore all the hallmarks of the Sunni terror group al Qaeda in Iraq, which has killed hundreds of people in bombings against Ashura pilgrims in recent years, other Islamic extremist groups have used the day to stage bloody attacks.
Among the bloodiest attacks during Ashura were a series of mortar attacks and bombings in Baghdad and Karbala that year 2004 which killed nearly 200 pilgrims and wounded more than 500 others.
Last week, police in the southern city of Basra arrested a leading figure in a messianic Shiite cult, known as the "Soldiers of Heaven," that has battled with Iraqi and U.S. forces during the holiday.
At least 72 people died - mostly cult members - in ferocious battles with police in 2008. The group has sought to invoke chaos as a means of inspiring the return of the "Hidden Imam" - also known as the Mahdi - a descendant of the Prophet Muhammad who disappeared as a child in the ninth century. Shiites believe he will return one day to bring justice to the world.
In 2007, more than 200 members of the "Soldiers of Heaven" cult were killed and 600 people arrested after battles near the Shiite holy city of Najaf as they sought to declare an Islamic state during Ashura. At least 11 Iraqi troops were killed along with two Americans, whose helicopter was shot down during the battle.
Montana National Guard To Iraq
Montana National Guard soldiers in Havre, Kalispell and Libby units are scheduled to arrive at Helena's Fort Harrison today as they prepare for deployment to Iraq.
About 120 soldiers in the 639th Combat Sustainment Supply Company are due at Fort Harrison, and are to leave there for Fort Lewis, Wash., on Tuesday. They have been told that departure for Iraq will be in late January or in February.
In 2005, the 639th returned from 15 months of duty in Iraq.
Iran, Iraq To Increase Economic Cooperation
Iran's state television says Iran and Iraq will increase their economic cooperation to $10 billion in 2010.
The report on Sunday quotes Iranian Vice President Parviz Davoudi. He says the cooperation will be in the energy and trade fields and will also include reconstruction projects in Iraq.
Current economic cooperation between the two countries is about $4 billion.
The remarks come at the end of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's two-day visit to Iran.
This trip was al-Maliki's fourth to Iran since he was elected prime minister.
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Earache, this is the comment you typed in:
"...and allow Iraqi factions to get back to killing each other....". - Reply to this comment
- Ask the Kurds if Saddam had WMD''s.
- Reply to this comment
- earache4:
So what? - Reply to this comment
- man in Aspen has bombs to kill folks...man dressed as Santa kills family and their friends by shooting/fire...thugs rape lesbian woman...governor tries to sell senate seat...
is that Baghdad?...nope the US.
They got issues and we got issues. We also had a civil war 80 years after the constition was signed. - Reply to this comment
- "Saddam Hussein had a WMD. He used it on the Kurds. He had more. He slaughtered people in his own family. His son raped school girls. Saddam defied 17 UN resolutions to allow inspections. He swindled the oil for food program. Why does anyone believe he didn''''t have WMD''''s?"
All of that may be true, but the question remains, has our presence in Iraq been worth over 4000 American lives? I think not. Saddam Hussein was never the threat to us that Adolf Hitler, the Japanese war lords, or Joseph Stalin was.
I say, get out, and the sooner the better. - Reply to this comment
- Saddam Hussein had a WMD. He used it on the Kurds. He had more. He slaughtered people in his own family. His son raped school girls. Saddam defied 17 UN resolutions to allow inspections. He swindled the oil for food program. Why does anyone believe he didn''t have WMD''s?
- Reply to this comment
- All religion is evil, if they had a true God why would they need to sell it to you??
Posted by pythoncharly at 08:57 PM : Jan 04, 2009
Maybe, but I''ve often thought that evil normally bought you, with promises of greath wealth and power. - Reply to this comment
- group has sought to invoke chaos as a means of inspiring the return of the "Hidden Imam."
Hmmmmm, I wonder where in Baghdad is he? I guess if it were known, it wouldn''t be hidden anymore. - Reply to this comment
- The killings between Catholics and Protestants ended with the Irish. The Shiite-Sunni killings continue.
- Reply to this comment
- Sounds like another Blackwater/al-CIA''da bombing.
It has all the hallmarks. - Reply to this comment
- Posted by eraser8818 at 07:32 PM : Jan 04, 2009
your not referring to JT "habu" Brown are you? - Reply to this comment
- That''''s never been one of my nome de plume.
Posted by jbrown88881 at 06:37 PM : Jan 04, 2009
Sorry, I thought you were someone I knew. - Reply to this comment
- The issue goes far deeper than religion. Gendercide is normal in Iran.
Check out www.SurviveIran.com - Reply to this comment
- GAZA CUT INTO THREE PIECES BY ISRAELI ARMY
Israeli ground troops and tanks cut swaths through the Gaza Strip early Sunday, dividing the coastal territory into three parts and surrounding its biggest city in an effort to prevent Hamas militants from accessing weapons.
At least 40 civilians, including three medics, have reportedly been killed since Israel launched a ground invasion late Saturday, Gaza health officials told the Associated Press.
Since the Israeli offensive began on Dec. 27, more than 500 Palestinians have been killed, including at least 100 civilians, Palestinian and U.N. officials told the AP. Wounded are in the thousands. At least three Israeli civilians and two soldiers have been killed in the same period. - Reply to this comment
- Iraqis in Dearborn have been there for decades, escaping Saddam and embracing the U.S. My brother rented an apartment from Iraqis back in "86", the area already estabished as a refuge from Saddam. These people were the lucky ones who got away, many had to leave family behind and feared their deaths at the hands of Saddam (as Saddam considered them traitors).
- Reply to this comment
- The largest Iraqi population in the U.S. resides in Dearborn, Michigan. They settled there to escape Saddam Hussein, thousands of displaced Iraqis that are happy to live under GW and celebrating the demise of Saddam.
- Reply to this comment
- I thought your precious "surge" worked? Looks like your failure is firing back up again.
HAHAHAHA!!
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Posted by FloydZeppd at 03:15 PM : Jan 04, 2009
I believe the surge has worked and so does Barack Obama, the new President elect. - Reply to this comment
- Nutwings like you always want to overlook the FACT that if you nutballs hadn''''t invaded, NONE OF THIS would be happening.
End of story Grandma.
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Posted by FloydZeppd at 03:17 PM : Jan 04, 2009
Yeah right nitwit, it''s ok with you to have Saddam in charge with the authority to kill at will. Saddam''s henchmen enjoyed terrorizing and killing those that didn''t agree with them. Now Iraq has a new government and the once brutalized faction gets to fight back instead of being firing squad fodder. Floydzep the Saddam lover who thinks it''s ok for a corrupt regime to kill the opponents with no end in sight.
Gee and the elected parliament of combined factions all voted to keep us in Iraq, how strange they wanted us to stay.
Ongoing story, junior. - Reply to this comment
- pythoncharly or Chuck the Snake, I''''ll choose the later for you. I usually skip your posts as I''''ve already labeled you a blustering weirdo. Please visit the terrorists in the Middle East and scream "waterboard me" as they chop off your head.
Posted by promaclaura
You might want to add the screetcher FloydZeppd to the terrorist lover list. - Reply to this comment
- jbrown88881
So "JT", how''s it going? - Reply to this comment
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




