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IRAQ WARS
Car bomb at Iraq funeral kills 10
by Staff Writers
Hilla, Iraq (AFP) Sept 30, 2011

A car bomb ripped through a funeral procession near a mosque in central Iraq on Friday evening, killing at least 10 people, part of nationwide violence that left 14 dead.

The explosion occurred at around 5:30 pm (1430 GMT) outside the Nabi Ayub Shiite mosque, just south of Hilla, the capital of Babil province, as mourners were gathering for the funeral of Abdelamir Jaffar al-Khafaji, a leader of the Al-Khafaja tribe who died of natural causes.

A doctor at Hilla's main hospital put the toll at 10 killed and 45 wounded, while a police lieutenant said 10 people died and 29 were injured.

"I was 50 metres (yards) away from the explosion when it happened," said mourner Mohammed Kadhim, 45. "It happened near where the cars were parking, close to the entrance of the mosque."

"Then I saw dozens of people. Some were dead, some were injured. It was a chaotic scene."

Ali Khafaji, who was also attending, said he was "astonished at how the explosion happened, because on the way to the funeral, there were many police checkpoints."

The attack was condemned by parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, who said the blame for the violence lay with the "security apparatus".

Hilla, 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of Baghdad, lies along the route to Shiite pilgrimage sites in Najaf and Karbala, and Babil province has itself been the frequent target of attacks by Sunni insurgents.

On September 14, a car bomb outside a restaurant frequented by security force members in the town of Medhatiyah, just east of Hilla, killed 13 people and injured 42.

The deadliest violence in the city this year occurred on May 5 when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives-packed car at a police station, killing 24 policemen. The attack was claimed by Al-Qaeda's front group, the Islamic State of Iraq.

North of Baghdad, meanwhile, three people were killed, including a policeman, in multiple attacks in the restive province of Diyala, a security official said.

An initial magnetic "sticky bomb" attached to a car killed the vehicle's driver and wounded a passenger in Diyala's capital Baquba. Shortly afterwards, gunmen wearing police uniforms opened fire on a nearby checkpoint, killing one officer and wounding two others.

In the town of Baladruz, east of Baquba, a roadside bomb killed a car driver and wounded the vehicle's passenger, the security official said.

In the capital, a roadside bomb targeting a shop selling birds in the eastern neighbourhood of Zafraniyah killed at least one person, officials said.

An interior ministry official put the toll at one dead and eight wounded from the attack, while a doctor at a nearby hospital said two people were killed and six were injured.

Violence is down nationwide since its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 239 people were killed in violence in Iraq in August, according to official figures.

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Iraq police free kidnapped hunters
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Sept 30, 2011 - Iraqi security forces on Friday freed four men -- three Christians and a Turkman -- kidnapped 10 days ago while on a hunting trip near the disputed northern city of Kirkuk, officials said.

The men were travelling together to hunt wild boar on September 21 when they were snatched. Security forces discovered only their burned out car and dead hunting dogs.

"The army and police were working day and night recently to identify the terrorists in order to get to the place where they were hiding them, and eventually we got them," said Kirkuk provincial police chief Major General Jamal Taher Bakr.

Bakr said the four were "hidden in an underground prison, camouflaged by bushes and plants."

The group included Noel Yalda, 39, Petrus Gorgis, 50, Ashur Dawood, 55, and 60-year-old Jenkiz Izzadin Ali. The first three are Christian, while Ali is Turkman.

Gorgis said the kidnappers had visited the captives once a day, providing them with biscuits and drinks.

The abductors told them they should all be killed "for three reasons: because we are Christians, because we were hunting pigs, and because we were in the wrong place."

A security official said at the time of their kidnap that the area where they went missing, near the town of Daquq, about 45 kilometres (28 miles) south of Kirkuk city, was known to be frequented by the Ansar al-Sunna insurgent group, but said it was unclear who was behind the apparent kidnap.

Kidnappings are common in Kirkuk, the centre of Iraq's northern oil fields, 240 kilometres (150 miles) north of Baghdad. Police in the city accuse Al-Qaeda and other insurgent groups of being behind the kidnaps, as other sources of funding have dried up.

Kirkuk is at the centre of a tract of disputed territory that Kurdish leaders want to incorporate in their autonomous region in the north over the opposition of many Arab and Turkmen residents, as well as Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.





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IRAQ WARS
US troops no longer needed in northern Iraq: general
Washington (AFP) Sept 29, 2011
Large numbers of US troops are no longer needed on the ground in northern Iraq to defuse Arab-Kurdish tensions and have begun handing over control to local forces, a US commander said Thursday. Army Major General David Perkins, who leads 5,000 US troops deployed in northern Iraq, said the American contingent has gradually withdrawn from checkpoints that it had overseen to prevent clashes bet ... read more


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