ARAB WORLD NEWS
Insurgents kill dozens of Iraqis
ahead of the constitutional referendum
Photo:
US soldiers walk around at the scene of a suicide bomb attack in Baghdad, Iraq,
Tuesday.
BAGHDAD, Iraq- Insurgents determined to wreck
Iraq's constitutional referendum killed nearly 50 people and wounded dozens in a
series of attacks Tuesday, including a suicide car bomb that ripped apart a
crowded market in a town near the Syrian border. U.S. and Iraqi officials had
repeatedly warned that the insurgents would step up their attacks to undermine
Saturday's referendum, a crucial step in Iraq's democratic transition. In the
deadliest attack in Iraq in nearly two weeks, a suicide car bomb exploded at
about 11 a.m. in a crowded open market in the northwestern town of Tal Afar,
killing 30 Iraqis and wounding 45, said Brig. Najim Abdullah, Tal Afar's police
chief. He said all the victims appeared to be civilians since no Iraqi or U.S.
forces were in the centre of Tal Afar, which is 420 kilometres northwest of
Baghdad. Insurgents also used two suicide car bombs, three roadside bombs and
five drive-by shootings and a mortar attack on a used-clothes market in the
capital on Tuesday to kill a total of 15 Iraqis and wound 29, police said. A
suicide car bomb that exploded around noon at an Iraqi army checkpoint in a busy
area of western Baghdad killed eight Iraqi soldiers and one civilian and wounded
12 soldiers. In Kirkuk, 290 km north of Baghdad, a drive-by shooting killed two
policemen riding in a cab and their driver. The violence came four days ahead of
Iraq's key vote on the new draft constitution, which Kurds and the majority
Shiites largely support and the Sunni Arab minority rejects. Sunnis are
campaigning to defeat the charter at the polls, although officials from all
sides have been trying up to the last minute to decide on changes to the
constitution to swing Sunni support. Many Sunnis fear the document would create
nearly autonomous Kurdish and Shiite mini-states in the north and south, where
Iraq's oil wealth is located, and leave most Sunnis isolated in central and
western Iraq under a weak central government in Baghdad. Whether the
constitution passes or fails, Iraq is due to hold elections for a new parliament
on Dec. 15. Across Iraq, militants are currently demanding that Iraqis boycott
the referendum, and have killed at least 388 people in the last 16 days in a
series of attacks. "I expect violence because there's a group of terrorists and
killers who want to stop the advance of democracy in Iraq," U.S. President
George W. Bush said Tuesday on NBC-TV's Today show. But he also said he expected
Iraqis would vote. On Thursday, the government plans to impose a 6 p.m. to 6
a.m. curfew and to limit vehicle traffic across the country to improve security
before Saturday's vote. More than 600 Iraqi and U.S. forces also conducted
search operations in southern Baghdad early Tuesday, detaining 57 suspected
militants and killing two, the U.S. military said. In another development, Abdul
Hussein Hindawi, one of the eight highest-ranking officials on the Independent
Electoral Commission in Iraq, said Tuesday that Iraqi law will allow Saddam
Hussein and thousands of other Iraqi detainees who have not been brought to
trial to vote in the constitutional referendum. "All non-convicted detainees
have the right to vote. That includes Saddam and other former government
officials. They will vote," Hindawi told The Associated Press. Said Arikat, a
United Nations spokesman in Baghdad, said UN officials recently left 10,000
copies of the constitution at Iraq's U.S. detention centres for distribution
there. Farid Ayar, another commission member, said detainees will vote on
Thursday, two days ahead of the general vote. Saddam's long-awaited trial is
scheduled to begin Oct. 19 on charges that he and seven of his regime's henchmen
ordered the 1982 massacre of 143 people in a mainly Shiite town north of Baghdad
following a failed attack on Saddam's life. More than 12,000 detainees are being
held at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison, Camp Bucca and two other U.S. military
camps in Iraq, many awaiting trial or, in some cases, formal charges. Many of
the detainees are believed to be Sunni Arabs who were rounded up by U.S. and
Iraqi forces on suspicion of supporting Sunni-led insurgent groups. Tal Afar,
150 km east of the Syrian border, is located in an area where Iraq's Sunni-led
insurgents have been active, making it difficult for coalition forces to
maintain security in a large northwestern region of Iraq stretching to the
Syrian border. On Sept. 28, a woman suicide bomber attacked an Iraqi army
recruitment centre in Tal Afar, killing at least six people and wounding 30. The
woman, disguised in men's clothing, detonated her hidden explosives while
standing in line with job applicants outside the centre. That attack appeared to
be carried out in retaliation for a four-day offensive by U.S. and Iraqi forces
that had routed insurgents in Tal Afar. Iraqi authorities claimed that nearly
200 suspected militants were killed and 315 captured during the offensive, which
began Sept, 8. But when they completed the sweep, they discovered many of the
insurgents had slipped out, some of them through a network of underground
tunnels. On Tuesday, officials continued to distribute five million copies of
the constitution to voters, but parts of Baghdad and other areas of Iraq
complained about not receiving them. That was especially true in Anbar, the
western province where insurgents have been most active and where coalition
forces recently ended an offensive near the Syrian border and were completing
two others: Operation River Gate in Hadithah, Haqlaniyah and Parwana, and
Operation Mountaineer in and around Ramadi. By Saynan Salehdinne |
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