Toll Rises In Baghdad Bistro Blast
A car bomb that destroyed a Baghdad restaurant crowded with New Year's Eve revelers killed eight people, said U.S. officers at the scene Thursday, where men cleared rubble, a crane lifted burned out cars and injured men with bandages on their head stood in shards of exploded glass.
Two hospitals reported treating 35 people wounded in the blast. They included two Americans and a Briton.
No group has claimed responsibility for Wednesday night's bombing, which came despite tightened security amid warnings of possible holiday terror attacks.
Later in the evening, a bomb hidden in shrubs outside a separate restaurant in Baghdad exploded as a U.S. military convoy passed, wounding three American soldiers and three Iraqi civilians.
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At Nabil restaurant, Lt. Col. Peter Jones of the 1st Armored Division, said he pulled four bodies from the rubble, and that Iraqi police later found another four bodies in the rubble of the destroyed building. The toll had been put at four earlier.
"The glass came flying. Everything else blew up. People were blown apart," said Basam Sarhan, a 25-year-old baker working in the kitchen at the back of the restaurant, located in an upscale Baghdad neighborhood.
Col. Ralph Baker, division commander of the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Armored Division, said the blast was caused by a car booby-trapped with about 225 kilograms (500 pounds) of explosives. He said reports that it was a suicide bomb attack were "not true," and that they had questioned witnesses who said they saw a man running from a vehicle before the explosion.
The Los Angeles Times said three of its reporters and five local staff members suffered cuts and other wounds that did not appear life-threatening in the attack.
The reporters were Chris Kraul, from the newspaper's Mexico City bureau; Tracy Wilkinson, the paper's Rome bureau chief; and correspondent Ann Simmons, who formerly was the Times' bureau chief in Nairobi, Kenya. Also suffering minor injuries were three Iraqi drivers, a translator and a computer technician employed by The Times.
Salar Jaff, The Times' Baghdad bureau office manager, was driving to the restaurant behind three cars carrying his colleagues when the blast hit.
"I heard the screams. I saw two people putting their hands on their faces all covered with blood and their bodies were bleeding severely," Jaff told The Times. "The glass was everywhere. People were just lying there. The cars were smoking, they were on fire."
After the evening explosion, helicopters buzzed overhead as ambulances and U.S. soldiers converged on the Nabil restaurant, a popular spot with foreigners that advertised a New Year's Eve party with live music and belly dancing.
An American soldier leaned into the rubble after discovering a victim.
"She's got a pulse! She's got a pulse!" he screamed.
Several cars outside the restaurant were wrecked and in flames. Gunfire was heard after the explosion, which left a large crater on a side street near the building.
Sarhan, the baker, said there were about 25 people in the restaurant at the time of the blast.
Five Iraqis were killed, according to Lt. Gen. Ahmed Kadhem, deputy Iraqi interior minister and Baghdad chief of police. The wounded included 32 Iraqis and several Westerners, police and hospital officials said.
"The people who are carrying out such attacks do not discriminate about the place," said Police Brig. Hamid Alyasiry, who is in charge of Karrada, an upscale shopping and restaurant district where the blast occurred. "They want to frighten everyone to create terror."
One witness, Ahmed Hassanain, said a white Toyota Corolla car drove by the area five or six times before the bombing. The last time it passed, he said, the guard at the restaurant shot at it. It drove away. Two minutes later, there was an explosion. He said he did not know whether it was the Corolla that blew up.
"These people are terrorists," Hassanain said. "Nobody here supports them."
Outside the restaurant, a young man and a woman with blood on her face and shoulders wept and hugged each other. She said they were a family of six having New Year's dinner in the building next door when the blast ripped away the side wall. Her uncle was taken to a hospital, she said.
The area of the blast is frequented by rich Iraqis who shop and visit restaurants, and is lined with chic shops selling items such as cosmetics, curtains and upholstery. Three blocks from the restaurant, the windows of a big clothing shop were shattered.
The Nabil restaurant serves wine and other alcoholic drinks — a rarity in Baghdad — and a menu of Western and Arabic dishes.
Inside Nabil, big round tables set for dinner were covered with food. A bottle of White Horse scotch was still standing but its neck was blown off.
U.S. soldiers and Iraqi police had stepped up security in Baghdad on Wednesday, erecting more razor wire and checkpoints in key areas. Military officials have reported the possibility of attacks by insurgents over the holiday period.
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