UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
10:33 Mecca time, 07:33 GMT
News Middle East
Scores killed in Baghdad blasts

Victims  were taken to the nearby al-Kindi
hospital [Reuters]

Twin car bombs in central Baghdad have killed up to 120 people and wounded more than 150.
 
The blasts on Monday came on the first anniversary of the bombing of the Al Askari mosque in Samarra, north of the capital.

The first car bomb exploded in a garage under a wholesale market in the Shorja district, killing more than 40 people.

 

A second explosion hit the Haraj market just over one kilometre away, killing at least five more people and wounding more than 30.

People on fire

 

A column of smoke hundreds of feet wide billowed into the air above the market near the east bank of the Tigris river and near the central bank building.

 

The two car bombs, which occurred within 100m of each other, made a building collapse and set shops and market stalls on fire.

 

Blasts appeared timed to mark the end of a
national 'pause for reflection' [Reuters]
Ambulances and trucks took the wounded to nearby al-Kindi hospital in the largely Shia area that has been hit by a series of deadly bombings since the beginning of the year.

 

A cameraman at the scene saw people on fire and more than 30 ambulances arriving.

 

Hoda Abdel-Hamid, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Iraq, said that 120 people have reportedly died, with the death toll likely to rise.

 

Anniversary attack

 

The Samarra attack by al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2006 sparked sectarian bloodletting that has turned Baghdad and much of central Iraq into a battleground.

 

Your Views

"Success for Iraq  will need both groups coming to terms and to work together for the benefit of all Iraqis"

Iceman, Atlanta, US

Send us your views

The blasts appeared to be timed to mark the end of a national 15-minute pause for reflection called by Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, on the first anniversary of the Samarra shrine attack.

 

One resident said: "My store was completely burned. I lost 100,000 dollars."

 

"The government officials sit calmly in their offices, stuck on their chairs," he said, reflecting a widespread perception that al-Maliki's unity government has failed to bring any order to Baghdad.

 

Al-Maliki had ordered thousands of police and troops onto the street as part of a joint Iraqi and US security plan.

 Source: Agencies
 
Topics in this article
City

 
ARTICLE TOOLS
 Email Article  Email article
 Print Article  Print article
 Send Feedback  Send feedback
 Share article  Share article
Aljazeera.net/english 2003 - 2010 ©
Designed & Developed by Aljazeera IT