New Violence Flares In Iraq
A pair of car bombs exploded near government offices in the Iraqi capital on Thursday, killing 18 people and wounding three dozen others as insurgent attacks against the nation's security forces left at least eight others dead.
The near-simultaneous explosions outside an Interior Ministry office in a southeastern Baghdad neighborhood sent large plumes of smoke rising over the city and threw passers-by to the ground, witnesses said. U.S. military helicopters swooped overhead.
In an Internet posting, the militant group al Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for the bombings.
After clearing the area, U.S. forces set off a third car that apparently failed to explode earlier, police said. No one was injured in the last blast.
Ali Ahmed, 28, said he was selling ice cream from his stall when he heard an explosion, followed by gunfire and another explosion.
"My stall was partially destroyed because of this terrorist act," he said. "Some people have lost their lives. As for me, I have now lost my source of income."
The explosions blew out the windows of nearby restaurants in an upscale neighborhood of Baghdad, near the heavily fortified Green Zone. Panicked students from a nearby secondary school wept and shouted that they weren't going to attend classes anymore, waiting in the street for school buses or relatives to pick them up.
Interior Ministry official, Capt. Ahmed Ismael, said the first two blasts killed 18 and wounded 36. One government worker said five garbage collectors he was supervising were killed.
In other developments:
In Kirkuk, seven gunmen riding in two vehicles fired on the police station just south of Kirkuk shortly after dawn, killing five police officers and one civilian, police Brig. Sarhat Qadir said.
Militant group Ansar al-Sunnah claimed responsibility for the attack, saying in an Internet posting that its "knights of Islam" attacked "renegade policemen doing their morning training." The claim couldn't be independently verified.
Ansar al-Sunnah also said it had teamed up with Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al Qaeda in Iraq for an attack earlier this week in Kirkuk — an unusual mention of cooperation among Iraq's disparate and sometimes competing militant groups.
The Web posting, which couldn't be independently corroborated, said the Wednesday explosive device that killed 12 police was composed of three bombs buried under a decoy device — a lure to draw policemen to the blast site.
On Wednesday, an American was shown at gunpoint on a videotape aired by Al-Jazeera television, two days after he was kidnapped from a water treatment plant near Baghdad. The station said he pleaded for his life and urged U.S. troops to withdraw from Iraq.
The U.S. Embassy said the man on the video appeared to be Jeffrey Ake, a contract worker who was kidnapped around noon Monday. Ake — the 47-year-old president and CEO of Equipment Express, a company that manufacturers bottled water equipment — is the latest of more than 200 foreigners seized in Iraq in the past year.
The station didn't air audio of the video, but said the man asked the U.S. government to begin talks with the Iraqi resistance and save his life. No group claimed responsibility, and there was no way to authenticate the video. Al-Jazeera didn't say how it obtained the tape.
U.S. President George W. Bush's press secretary, Scott McClellan, said there would be no negotiating with the kidnappers.
"Any time there is a hostage — an American hostage — it is a high priority for the United States," he said. "Our position is well known when it comes to negotiating. Obviously this is a sensitive matter."