Business Standard

Bombs against Iraqi Sunnis kill 51

Image

AFP Baquba (Iraq)
Bombs targeting Sunnis, including two near a mosque and one at a funeral procession, killed 51 people in Iraq today, officials said, after dozens died in two days of attacks in Shiites.

The violence raises the spectre of tit-for-tat killings common during the height of sectarian bloodletting in Iraq that killed tens of thousands of people, and comes at a time of simmering tension between the country's Sunni minority and Shiite majority.

One bomb exploded as worshippers were leaving Saria mosque in the city of Baquba, north of Baghdad, while a second detonated after people gathered at the scene of the first blast, killing a total of 41 people and wounding 57, police and a doctor said.
 

"Authorities should stop these daily explosions and car bombs against innocent people," Abbas al-Zaidi, 47, said near the scene of the blasts.

Security forces cordoned off the area and the main hospital in Baquba, an AFP journalist said.

A string of ambulances carried victims to the hospital, and police and soldiers also helped transport the wounded and dead.

In Madain, south of Baghdad, a roadside bomb exploded near a funeral procession for a Sunni man, killing eight people and wounding at least 25 others, security and medical officials said.

And a bomb in a coffee shop in the Sunni city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, killed two people and wounded eight, police and a doctor.

In other violence today, gunmen killed a government employee and one of his relatives in the northern city of Kirkuk, police and a doctor said.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: May 17 2013 | 11:30 PM IST

Explore News