
Celeste Zapala of the U.S., a member of an organization of people opposed to the war in Iraq named Military Families Speak Out, displays her son Sherwood Baker's picture who was killed in Iraq in 2004, during a demonstration in central Istanbul yesterday. The protesters marked the third anniversary of the Turkish parliament's decision to reject a U.S. request to allow its troops to cross Turkish territory to invade northern Iraq. - REUTERS
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP):
BOMBINGS IN Baghdad killed 26 people, and four others died when mortar rounds slammed into their homes in a nearby town yesterday, the second day of surging violence after authorities lifted a curfew that briefly calmed sectarian attacks.
A spokesman for the powerful Association of Muslim Scholars criticised the Shiite-led government for failing to protect Iraqis, and he urged Sunnis to defend their mosques.
"All evidence has proven that the government and its security forces are incapable of taking any action," said Abdul-Salam al-Kubaisi, a spokesman for the Sunni clerical group.
Al-Kubaisi denied Sunnis were behind the latest attacks, saying Shiite politicians and religious leaders were trying to inflame sectarian hatred "to make use of these events and everything in this country to achieve one goal, to serve their future interests."
Yesterday's most serious attack, a car bomb near a traffic police office in a primarily Shiite neighbourhood in southeast Baghdad, killed at least 23 people and wounded 58, according to police Lt. Thaer Mahmoud.
CAR BOMB EXPLODES
About an hour earlier, a bomb hidden under a car detonated as a police patrol passed near downtown Tahrir Square, said Interior Ministry Maj. Falah al-Mohammedawi. Three civilians died and 15 were wounded.
North of Baghdad, gunmen ambushed a police convoy carrying 50 officers, killing two passengers and abducting 10, police said. Four officers were seriously wounded.
The convoy of five minibuses was returning from a training session in Sulaimaniyah when it was attacked about 45 miles northeast of Tikrit, police Capt. Hakim al-Azzawi said.
The assailants drove off in one of the minibuses.
Mortar shells fell on three houses in the mixed Sunni-Shiite town of Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad, killing three civilians, police Capt. Rashid al-Samaraie said. A fifth mortar shell slammed into the mixed Qadisiyah neighbourhood in west Baghdad, killing a woman and wounding a child, Mahmoud said.
Iraq began to tilt seriously toward outright civil war after the February 22 bombing of the revered Shiite Askariya shrine in the mainly Sunni city of Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad.
The government said 379 people had been killed and 458 injured as of Tuesday afternoon in nearly a week of sectarian violence tied to the Askariya bombing. Another 30 died Wednesday.