Watch CBS News

More Than 100 Dead In Baghdad Attacks

An explosion outside a Baghdad university as students were heading home for the day killed at least 65 people on Tuesday in the deadliest of several attacks on predominantly Shiite areas. The attacks — and the announcement of four U.S. military deaths — came on a day the United Nations said more than 34,000 Iraqi civilians died last year in sectarian violence.

Attacks in Baghdad — including the university explosion, blasts at a marketplace for used motorcycles and a drive-by shooting — killed more than 100 people in what appeared to be a final spasm of violence ahead of an imminent drive by the Iraqi government and U.S. forces to secure the capital.

As accustomed as Iraqis have become to bloodshed, the attack outside the university, which specifically targeted the young and innocent, shocked people across the capital, reports CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan.

On Monday, the Iraqi government hanged two of Saddam Hussein's henchmen in an execution that left many of the ousted leader's fellow Sunni Muslims seething after one of the accused, the ousted leader's half brother, was decapitated on the gallows.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Tuesday's violence was the work of those seeking revenge for the executions, calling those responsible "a desperate group of terrorists and Saddamists."

The military said four U.S. soldiers with Task Force Lightning were killed Monday in the northwestern province of Ninevah, home to the city of Mosul, which has seen a recent increase in violence. The deaths raised to at least 3,026 members of the U.S. military who have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

In Baghdad, the deadliest attacks took place in primarily Shiite neighborhoods and appeared to be the work of Sunnis, who largely make up the insurgency targeting the Iraqi government and U.S. forces.

Raad Abbas, a 26-year-old wounded in the attack at the motorcycle market that killed 13, said he went to the market because the city had been quieter over the past two weeks.

"Shortly after midday, I heard an explosion. Motorcycles were flying in the air, people were falling dead and wounded," he said from his hospital bed.

As the curious gathered to look at the aftermath of the first explosion — a bomb attached to a motorcycle — a suicide car bomber drove into the crowd and blew up his vehicle. The attack appeared to target the mainly Shiite neighborhood near the market but also was near the Sheik al-Gailani shrine, one of the holiest Sunni locations in the capital.

The bombing near Al-Mustansiriya University took place as students were boarding minivans waiting outside the building to take them home, police said. Some police said the explosion was caused by a suicide car bomber and others said two of the minivans blew up as students were boarding.

Only a few weeks ago, female students at the ancient university, founded in 1233, told CBS News they would not give in to death threats and fear, even though 171 Iraqi professors have been murdered so far.

Taqi al-Moussawi, the university's dean, told state-run al-Iraqiya TV there were two explosions. He said a suicide attacker was later discovered with the apparent aim of targeting students as they fled but the attacker's explosives belt was detonated before students got close to him. He also said the students belonged to all religions, sects and ethnic groups.

"The terrorists want to stop education. ... those students had nothing to do with politics. They only came to the university to learn," he said.

About 45 minutes after the university attack, gunmen in a minivan and on two motorcycles opened fire on an outdoor market in a mainly Shiite neighborhood in nearby section of eastern Baghdad, police said. At least 11 people were killed.

In other developments:

  • President Bush said Tuesday the chaotic execution of Saddam Hussein looked like "kind of a revenge killing" and showed that the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki "has still got some maturation to do." In his toughest assessment yet, Bush criticized the circumstances of Saddam's hanging and the execution of two top aides, including Saddam's half brother. "I was disappointed and felt like they fumbled the — particularly the Saddam Hussein execution," the president said in an interview with PBS' Jim Lehrer.
  • Ahead of the drive to secure Baghdad, Cabinet ministers and legislators loyal to the radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr were instructed to end their six-week boycott of the political process, but laid out a series of conditions, including a demand that the government set up a committee to establish a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops.
  • Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's request for support of the new U.S. strategy in Iraq from Arab leaders got a tepid response from Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Tuesday. Saud al-Faisel expressed skepticism that the Iraqi government is capable of doing its part to crack down on the insurgency. Rice again said the United States believes that Syria can play a positive role in Iraqi peace efforts, if it stops supporting extremists in the region.
  • A former Iraqi translator for the U.S. military said his life was saved when he was granted a special visa to live in the United States, a status made available to only 50 Afghan and Iraqi nationals annually who served in the same capacity. The Sunni Arab, set to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, said he was threatened by enraged fellow students, survived a car bomb and learned his name was listed on the doors of mosques calling for his death. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., has argued for an increase in the number of translator visas.

    Gianni Magazzeni, the chief of the U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq in Baghdad, said 34,452 civilians were killed — an average of 94 per day — and 36,685 were wounded last year in sectarian violence.

    The Iraqi Health Ministry did not comment on the U.N. report, which was based on information released by the Iraqi government and hospitals. The government has disputed previous figures released by the U.N. as "inaccurate and exaggerated."

    White House spokesman Tony Snow said he doesn't want to quibble over the U.N. estimate, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Knoller. Whether it's more or less, Snow said it's too many.

    "It is clear that the level of violence in Baghdad and throughout Iraq is unacceptable," Snow said.

    The U.N. report also said that 30,842 people were detained in the country as of Dec. 31, including 14,534 in detention facilities run by U.S.-led multinational forces.

    It pointed to killings targeting police, who are seen by insurgents as collaborating with the U.S. effort in Iraq. The report said the Interior Ministry had reported on Dec. 24 that 12,000 police officers had been killed since the war started in 2003.

    In Monday's execution, a thickset Barzan Ibrahim plunged through the trap door and was beheaded by the jerk of the thick rope at the end of his fall, in the same execution chamber where Saddam was hanged a little over two weeks earlier.

    A government video of the hanging, played at a briefing for reporters, showed Ibrahim's body passing the camera in a blur. The body came to rest on its chest while the severed head lay a few yards away, still wearing the black hood pulled on moments before by one of Ibrahim's five masked executioners.

    CBS News reporter Edward Yeranian reports the video has caused a across the Arab world, not just in Iraq.

    He says the large-circulation Arab daily newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi, published in London, has reported that the beheading was deliberate, carried out by enemies of Saddam's former regime to insult Sunni Muslims.

  • View CBS News In
    CBS News App Open
    Chrome Safari Continue