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[Marxism] A new surge



NY Times, March 24, 2008
At Least 51 Die in Attacks Across Iraq
By ERICA GOODE

BAGHDAD ? The shelling started just before 6 a.m., mortar fire
shaking buildings and sending early risers in the Green Zone here
running for shelter. Sirens went off, and loudspeakers blared, "Duck
and cover! Duck and cover!" A thick column of gray smoke rose above
the embassies and government buildings in the area.

The early morning onslaught on Sunday was one of the fiercest and
most sustained attacks on the Green Zone in the past year, and it
ushered in a day of violence that claimed the lives of at least 51
Iraqi civilians and soldiers, including two children.

Philip T. Reeker, a spokesman for the American Embassy, said the
mortar attacks had caused "no deaths or major injuries" within the
Green Zone. He noted that for security reasons, American officials do
not release details of such attacks. But one mortar shell fell short
of the zone and landed in the Bab al-Sharji neighborhood in central
Baghdad, killing one person and wounding five others, according to
Iraq's Interior Ministry. Another fell in the Karrada near the house
of Vice President Adel Abdul Mahdi, but no casualties were reported,
the Iraqi police said.

Witnesses said that the mortar shells ? from 6 to 10, according to
different accounts ? were fired from Baladyat, a Shiite neighborhood
in eastern Baghdad.

Several more volleys of mortar fire aimed toward the Green Zone
followed during the day, including a series of intense blasts just
before 8:30 p.m.

One mortar round landed on the west bank of the Tigris, just outside
the Green Zone wall, igniting a large brush fire.

American military officials have in the past blamed such attacks on
Shiite militia factions or "special groups" that have received
backing from Iran. The factions are thought to be splinter groups
within the Mahdi Army militia founded by the Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr.

Last month, Mr. Sadr announced the extension of a cease-fire begun
last year and said that he would not tolerate any violations of the order.

In the Shuala area of western Baghdad on Sunday, a bomb in a parked
car exploded, killing six and wounding at least 10. The explosion
tore through the neighborhood's main street of houses and shops.

"We were having our lunch inside the restaurant when we heard a big
sound of explosion which broke the front glass of shop," said Abbas
Qasim, 38, the owner of a store on the street.

" I almost suffocated while I was eating and when I got out, I saw
four cars burning," he said. "One of them was a van carrying students
who just got back from the university. I rushed to help them with
some locals but five of them were already dead and riddled with shrapnel."

Ali Mahmoud, 45, said that the explosion was the first in the
neighborhood in two years.

"The American war planes were shelling most of the area all last
night because of the Madhi Army," he said. "This car bomb is a
message for us because our neighborhood is dominated by the Mahdi Army."

Violence also struck the Zafaraniya neighborhood, in the southern
part of the capital, where gunmen in three cars opened fire on
pedestrians, killing seven and wounding 16.

In the north of Iraq, a suicide bomber in a truck smashed through a
barrier of armored vehicles in front of an Iraqi Army garrison in the
al-Haramat neighborhood of Mosul. The bomb, when it detonated, killed
12 soldiers and wounded 42 other soldiers and civilians.

The wounded, American military officials said, "were evacuated to
local medical facilities for treatment or treated on-site."

American forces also reported killing "12 terrorists," after they
attacked ground troops east of Baquba.

In a statement, the military said that American troops had ordered
the occupants of a building to come outside.

"Some complied but others remained inside," the statement said.
"Coalition forces entered the building and were fired upon by several
armed men."

The statement said that six of the men who were killed had shaved the
hair off their bodies, which, the military said, was consistent "with
final preparation for suicide operations."

But an official of the Baquba police said that American war planes
had shelled the house, which belonged to Khudhaier Salem, a prominent
senior figure in the region, killing 13 and wounding nine, including
people in neighboring houses.

Also in Baquba, two children were killed when they picked up an
improvised explosive device, police officials said.


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