Wave of car bombs kills 63 during Iraq pilgrimage

BAGHDAD (AP) — Coor­di­nated car bombs struck mainly Shi­ite pil­grims in sev­eral Iraqi cities Wednes­day, killing at least 63 peo­ple and wound­ing dozens more in one of the dead­liest attacks since U.S. troops with­drew from the country.

The blood­shed was a stark reminder of the polit­i­cal ten­sions threat­en­ing to pro­voke a new round of sec­tar­ian vio­lence that once pushed Iraq to the brink of civil war. The pil­grims were headed to the north­ern Bagh­dad neigh­bor­hood of Kaz­imiyah to mark the anniver­sary of the death of a revered Shi­ite saint who is interred there.

The first bomb struck a pro­ces­sion at around 5 a.m. in the town of Taji, north of Bagh­dad, killing seven peo­ple and wound­ing 2, two police offi­cers said.

That was fol­lowed by four more morn­ing blasts that hit other groups of pil­grims across the cap­i­tal, killing 25 peo­ple and wound­ing more than 70, accord­ing to police and health officials.

South of Bagh­dad, two car bombs exploded min­utes apart at dawn in the cen­ter of the city of Hillah, killing 21 peo­ple and wound­ing 53, accord­ing to two police offi­cers and one health worker.

A parked car bomb also exploded near a group of pil­grims in the Shi­ite holy city of Kar­bala, 90 kilo­me­ters (55 miles) south of Bagh­dad, at about 8 a.m., killing two peo­ple and wound­ing 22 oth­ers, a police offi­cial and health offi­cial said.

Two nearly simul­ta­ne­ous car bombs also killed seven pil­grims and wounded 34 in the Shi­ite town of Balad, 80 kilo­me­ters (50 miles) north of Bagh­dad, , a police offi­cial and health offi­cial said.

All the offi­cials spoke on con­di­tion of anonymity because they weren’t autho­rized to release the information.

Another per­son was killed in the north­ern city of Kirkuk when three more bombs exploded, one of them out­side the polit­i­cal office of a promi­nent eth­nic Kur­dish leader.

The attacks were the third this week tar­get­ing the annual pil­grim­age that sees hun­dreds of thou­sands of Shi­ites con­verge on Bagh­dad on foot to com­mem­o­rate the 8th cen­tury death of revered Imam Moussa al-Kadhim.

Bagh­dad mil­i­tary com­mand spokesman Col. Dhia al-Wakeel said Wednesday’s attacks meant to reignite all-out sec­tar­ian blood­shed, “but Iraqis are fully aware of the ter­ror­ism agenda and will not slip into a sec­tar­ian conflict.”

Nobody imme­di­ately claimed respon­si­bil­ity for the attacks but they bore the hall­marks of Sunni insur­gents who fre­quently tar­get Shi­ite pil­grim­ages in Iraq.

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Arti­cle Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/M/ML_IRAQ?SITE=NCBER&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT