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IS-claimed Baghdad blast kills at least 75

Dunya News

The bombing came a week after Iraqi forces completely recaptured Fallujah.

BAGHDAD (AFP) - A suicide car bombing claimed by the Islamic State group ripped through a Baghdad shopping district Sunday, killing at least 75 people in the deadliest single attack in the capital this year.

The blast hit the Karrada neighbourhood in the early hours of the day, as the area was packed with shoppers after sundown ahead of this week’s holiday marking the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramazan.

It came a week after Iraqi security forces recaptured the city of Fallujah from IS, leaving Mosul as the only Iraqi city under the militants’ control.

The bombing also wounded more than 130 people, security and medical officials said.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi visited the site of the bombing and vowed "punishment" for its perpetrators, his office said.

The attack set buildings in the area ablaze, reducing some to charred hulks and also torching shops.


Iraqi women walk past a damaged building at the site of a suicide car bombing that was claimed by the Islamic State group in Baghdad, on July 3, 2016 © AFP Sabah Arar


Men carried the bodies of two victims out of one burned building and a crowd of people looked on from the rubble-filled street as firefighters worked at the site.

IS issued a statement claiming responsiblity for the suicide car bombing, saying it was carried out by an Iraqi as part of the group’s "ongoing security operations".

The militant group said the bombing targeted members of Iraq’s Shiite Muslim majority, whom the Sunni extremists consider heretics and frequently attack in Baghdad and elsewhere.

Bombings in the capital have decreased since IS overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in June 2014, apparently because the militants were occupied with operations elsewhere.

But the group has struck back against Iraqi civilians after suffering military setbacks, both as revenge and to portray itself as being on the offensive.

In May, the capital was rocked by a series of blasts that killed more than 150 people in seven days.


Major setback in Fallujah


With thousands of vehicles moving in and out of the city each day, such bombings are difficult to prevent.

But there are also flaws in Iraqi security measures in the city, especially the continued use of fake bomb detectors at checkpoints in the city years after the man who sold them to Iraq was jailed for fraud in Britain.


The bomb ripped through a busy street in the Karrada district of Baghdad, as people were shopping ahead of the holiday marking the end of Ramadan © AFP Sabah Arar


A video posted on social media Sunday showed men -- apparently angry at the government’s failure to prevent the attack -- throwing rocks toward what was said to be Abadi’s convoy.

Iraqi forces completely recaptured Fallujah, a city 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, from the militants a week ago.

Anti-government fighters seized Fallujah in early 2014 and it later became one of IS’s main strongholds in the country.

Iraqi forces launched an operation in May to recapture the city, one of only two in the country then held by IS.

The defeat was compounded by a devastating series of air strikes targeting militant forces as they sought to flee the Fallujah area.

Iraqi and US-led coalition aircraft destroyed hundreds of IS vehicles and killed dozens of fighters in two days of strikes against militant convoys after the end of the fighting, officials said.

With Fallujah retaken, Iraqi forces are now setting their sights on second city Mosul, the last major population centre held by IS in Iraq.


An Iraqi firefighter works at the site of a suicide car bomb in Baghdad, on July 3, 2016 © AFP Sabah Arar


Initial operations aimed at setting the stage for a final assault on the city have begun, and the US-led coalition is carrying out strikes in the area.

The Pentagon announced on Friday that the coalition had killed two senior IS leaders in the Mosul area the week before.

In addition to Mosul, IS still holds significant territory in Nineveh province, of which it is the capital, as well as areas in Kirkuk to its west and Anbar to its south.

The militant group seized control of large parts of Iraq and Syria in mid-2014, declaring an Islamic "caliphate", committing widespread atrocities and organising or inspiring a series of deadly attacks in Western cities and across the Middle East.