Al-Qaeda claims Iraq attacks

Iraqis inspect the aftermath of a late-night car bombing near a cafe in al-Amin Shiite neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, Iraq.

Iraqis inspect the aftermath of a late-night car bombing near a cafe in al-Amin Shiite neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, Iraq.

Published Jul 25, 2012

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Baghdad - Al-Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq has claimed responsibility for scores of attacks across the country targeting mostly Shi'a Muslim targets this week which killed and wounded hundreds of people.

The Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) said in a statement posted on radical Islamist websites on Tuesday that it was behind the recent attacks, which it called its “Destroying the Walls” campaign and said was the start of a “new stage of jihad”.

At least 116 people were killed and about 300 wounded in bomb and gun attacks on Monday, by far the bloodiest day of violence since US troops withdrew in December. A day earlier 20 were killed in bombings as part of a co-ordinated surge of violence.

“The Ministry of War has mobilised its sons and mujahideen brigades and their military groups in a new blessed foray in the holy month of Ramadan,” the ISI statement said.

“Simultaneous and co-ordinated jihadist operations have swept across the country in a spate which stunned the enemy, made him lose his sense and showed the failure of intelligence and security plans which filled the world with noise and bluster.”

The bloodshed coincided with an intensifying of the conflict in neighbouring Syria. Iraqi officials have warned that al Qaeda militants are passing in and out of Syria through the 680km border between the two countries, and Baghdad has sent troops and tanks to the frontier to strengthen security.

Iraq, whose desert province of Anbar, a Sunni heartland, borders Syria, is nervous about the impact of the conflict in its neighbour where mainly Sunni rebels are fighting to end President Bashar al-Assad's Alawite-dominated rule.

On Monday insurgents hit targets including Shi'a areas of Baghdad, the Shi'a town of Taji to the north and the northern cities of Kirkuk and Mosul, hospital and police sources said.

The ISI often hits Shi'a targets to try to stir up the type of sectarian violence that drove Iraq to the edge of civil war and killed tens of thousands of people in 2006-2007.

While violence in Iraq has generally eased in recent months, deadly attacks like those on Monday have highlighted the deficiencies of the Iraqi security forces in stopping insurgents.

Last month was one of the bloodiest since the US withdrawal, with at least 237 people killed and 603 wounded.

Political tensions have escalated between Iraq's main Shi'a, Sunni and Kurdish factions since the US withdrawal. - Reuters

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