A twin suicide
bombing claimed by Islamic State killed 70 people in a Shi'ite district
of Baghdad on Sunday in the deadliest attack inside the capital this
year, as militants launched an assault on its western outskirts. Police
sources said the suicide bombers were riding motorcycles and blew
themselves up in a crowded mobile phone market in Sadr City, wounding
more than 100 people in addition to the dead. A
Reuters witness saw pools of blood on the ground with slippers, shoes
and mobile phones at the site of the blasts, which was sealed off to
prevent further attacks. In
a statement circulated online, Islamic State said it was responsible
for the blasts: "Our swords will not cease to cut off the heads of the
rejectionist polytheists, wherever they are," it said, using derogatory
terms for Shi'ite Muslims. Iraqi
forces backed by airstrikes from a U.S.-led coalition have driven
Islamic State back in the western Anbar province recently and are
preparing for an offensive to retake the northern city of Mosul. But
the militants are still able to strike outside territory they control,
often targeting members of Iraq's Shi'ite majority, most recently on
Thursday when two Islamic State suicide bombers killed 15 people at a
mosque in the capital. Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi said the attacks were in response to Islamic
State's recent defeats: "This gang targeted civilians after it lost the
initiative and its dregs fled the battlefield before our proud
fighters," he said on his official Facebook page. At
dawn on Sunday, suicide bombers and gunmen attacked Iraqi security
forces in Abu Ghraib, seizing positions in a grain silo and a cemetery,
and killing at least 17 members of the security forces, officials said.
Security officials blamed
Islamic State, and a news agency that supports the group said it had
launched a "wide attack" in Abu Ghraib, 25 km (15 miles) from the center
of Baghdad and next to the international airport. Footage
circulated online by the Amaq news agency appeared to show Islamic
State fighters crouching behind dirt berms and launching the attack with
automatic rifles, machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades. Reuters
could not verify the video's authenticity. Security forces had mostly regained control by Sunday evening but officials said there were still clashes. Baghdad-based
security analyst Jasim al-Bahadli said the assault suggested it was
premature to declare that Islamic State was losing the initiative in
Iraq. "Government forces must do a
better job repelling attacks launched by Daesh. What happened today
could be a setback for the security forces," he said, using an Arabic
acronym for Islamic State. COUNTER OFFENSIVE Army and police
sources said the militants had attacked from the nearby Islamic
State-controlled areas of Garma and Falluja, driving Humvees and pickup
trucks fixed with machine guns. A
curfew was imposed as a regiment of Iraq's elite counter-terrorism
forces was mobilized to retake the silo in Abu Ghraib and prevent the
militants approaching the nearby airport, security officials said. Iraqi
army helicopters bombarded Islamic State positions in the and Interior
Ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan said at least 20
militants had been killed in the government's counter offensive. Fighters
from the Hashid Shaabi, a coalition of mainly Iranian-backed Shi'ite
militias, were mobilized to Abu Ghraib to reinforce regular government
forces in the area, said Jawad al-Tulaibawi, a local Hashid commander. Powerful
Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr also called on fighters loyal to him to
be on alert to protect Baghdad. Shi'ite militias like Sadr's 'Peace
Brigades' were seen as a bulwark against Islamic State's sweeping
advance in 2014 which threatened Iraq's capital and its most sacred
Shi'ite shrines.
Twin suicide bombing kills 70 in Baghdad's deadliest attack this year
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