The
UN warned on Sunday against revenge attacks in Iraq after two blasts killed 73
people in a Shiite area of Baghdad a day after a Sunni mosque was
bombed.Saturday's bombings struck near funeral tents for a tribal sheikh in the
Sadr City district of north Baghdad and also wounded more than 200 people.
It
was just the latest in an upsurge of violence that has brought death tolls to
their highest level since 2008, when Iraq was emerging from a brutal sectarian
conflict."Retaliation can only bring more violence and it is the
responsibility of all leaders to take strong action not to let violence
escalate further," Gyorgy Busztin, the UN secretary general's deputy
special representative for Iraq, said in a statement.
"Violence in all
forms must be condemned, but I am particularly appalled by the increasing
number of vicious attacks against those already bereaved," he said.The
Sadr City bombings were not the first targeting mourners in recent months.
They
came after two bombs exploded on Friday at a Sunni mosque near Samarra, north
of Baghdad, killing 18 people.Militants have carried out a number of attacks on
both Sunni and Shiite mosques this year.Iraq was ravaged by a bloody
Sunni-Shiite conflict that peaked in 2006-2007 and killed thousands of
people.There are persistent fears, bolstered by various sectarian attacks this
year, that Iraq may return to all-out conflict between the country's Shiite
majority and Sunni minority.
"Attacks like these are perpetrated by a small
minority of terrorists who wish to destabilise Iraq," the British embassy
said of the Sadr City blasts.It called on "all political, religious and
community leaders to unite against those who perpetrate these crimes.
"On
Sunday, mourners placed coffins containing the bodies of victims of the blasts
atop vehicles for transport to Najaf for burial near the shrine of Imam Ali,
one of the holiest sites in Shiite Islam, an AFP journalist said.Bare metal
frames were all that remained of the funeral tents in Sadr City.
Debris
including broken plastic furniture and bottles of water distributed to mourners
littered the ground.Eighteen more people died in other violence on Saturday,
including 11 security forces members, and four people shot dead at a Baghdad
alcohol shop.It was the United Nations' International Day of Peace, which calls
for a "complete global cessation of hostilities for one day."Saturday
was the second-deadliest day for Iraq this year, topped only by April 23, when
95 people died in violence.
The unrest continued on Sunday, with two police
killed and seven people wounded in attacks in Nineveh province in Iraq's
north.And in the northern city of Kirkuk, a suicide bomber blew up a vehicle
near the home of a Christian MP, wounding 47 people, including three of the
lawmaker's children.With the latest violence, more than 570 people have been
killed this month and over 4,400 since the beginning of the year, according to
AFP figures based on security and medical sources.
AFP
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.