Full-blown
sectarian war in Iraq. 761 killed in June
Nearly
50 killed in Iraq bombings
At
least 45 people were killed in bomb attacks across Iraq on Tuesday,
most of them in busy markets and commercial areas of the capital
Baghdad, police and medics said
2
July, 2013
The
deadliest assault took place in the predominantly Shi'ite Shaab
neighbourhood of northern Baghdad, where two car bombs killed eight
people. There were also explosions in the mainly Shi'ite districts of
Abu Dsheer, Kamaliya, Tobchi and Shula.
"A
blast hit near a crowded market full of people shopping," said
Ali Sadoun, a policeman whose patrol was stationed in Shula. "When
police and people gathered to help the wounded, a second bomb went
off, tearing through bodies."
Sunni
Muslims were the apparent targets of blasts in Amriya and Abu Ghraib,
on the city's western outskirts.
A
sustained campaign of attacks since the start of the year has
increased fears of wider conflict in a country where ethnic Kurds,
Shi'ite and Sunni Muslims have yet to find a stable power-sharing
compromise.
Insurgents
including al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate have been recruiting from the
country's Sunni minority, which resents Shi'ite domination since the
U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.
Intercommunal
tensions have been inflamed by the civil war in neighbouring Syria,
which is increasingly been fought along sectarian lines, drawing in
Shi'ite and Sunni fighters from Iraq and elsewhere to fight on
opposite sides of the conflict.
Outside
Baghdad, a bomb blast near a funeral tent in the city of Baquba
killed six people.
Further
south, a car bomb in Amara province killed four people and in the
city of Basra, three blasts hit a hotel frequented by foreigners
working in the oil industry, wounding three guards.
Violence
is still well below its height in 2006-07, but Sunni insurgents are
striking on a daily basis, seeking to destabilise the Shi'ite-led
government and provoke further confrontation.
On
Monday, attacks targeting Shi'ites left at least 27 people dead. The
number of people killed in militant attacks across Iraq in June
reached 761.
Iraqi
military forces are now better equipped and trained, but lack the
comprehensive intelligence resources and air cover to track
insurgents that they enjoyed before U.S. troops withdrew in December
2011.
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