Post by MJSUNIFC on Nov 24, 2005 15:48:17 GMT -5
Death toll for week nears 200 as dozens die in Mahmoudiya, Hilla
Khalid Mohammed / AP
The bodies of people killed in a suicide car bombing Thursday are transported to the hospital in Mahmoudiya, Iraq.
MAHMOUDIYA, Iraq - Deadly explosions rocked Iraq on Thursday, killing and wounding dozens in a continuing surge of violence prior to next month's parliamentary elections.
A suicide car bomber attacked a hospital south of Baghdad, claiming the lives of 34 people and injuring even more.
The explosives-packed car detonated as Iraqi security forces were gathered outside Mahmoudiya General Hospital and as U.S. civil affairs soldiers were visiting the facility to look at ways to improve it, the U.S. army and witnesses said.
Another car bomb exploded near a crowded market in Hilla, 62 miles south of Baghdad, killing up to four people, police said. Police earlier said up to 14 may have been killed.
In the Mahmoudiya blast, four U.S. troops were wounded, but most of those killed and injured were civilians, including Hoda Ali Mahmoud, a 30-year-old woman whose young son was killed. She had taken him to the hospital for treatment for a cold.
“The glass flew at us,” she said, sobbing as she sat up in hospital. “His nose was hit and he couldn’t breathe.”
The body of her son, less than two years old, lay on the morgue floor at Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad, where many of the wounded were brought.
Hasna Aboud’s son, who was due to get married next week, was also killed. “My 22-year-old son was killed while trying to bring me some medicine,” she said through her tears. “I lost my only son.”
Police sources said one of those killed in Mahmoudiya may have been the secretary-general of the Iraqi Workers Party, a member of the Iraqi parliament. No other details were immediately available.
The bombings are the latest in a series of suicide attacks and car bomb blasts that have killed nearly 200 people since last Friday, in what appears to be an increase in violence by insurgents ahead of December 15 parliamentary elections.
A little known group called “The Supporters for the Sunni Community” claimed the Hilla attack, an Internet statement said.
www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10107233/
Khalid Mohammed / AP
The bodies of people killed in a suicide car bombing Thursday are transported to the hospital in Mahmoudiya, Iraq.
MAHMOUDIYA, Iraq - Deadly explosions rocked Iraq on Thursday, killing and wounding dozens in a continuing surge of violence prior to next month's parliamentary elections.
A suicide car bomber attacked a hospital south of Baghdad, claiming the lives of 34 people and injuring even more.
The explosives-packed car detonated as Iraqi security forces were gathered outside Mahmoudiya General Hospital and as U.S. civil affairs soldiers were visiting the facility to look at ways to improve it, the U.S. army and witnesses said.
Another car bomb exploded near a crowded market in Hilla, 62 miles south of Baghdad, killing up to four people, police said. Police earlier said up to 14 may have been killed.
In the Mahmoudiya blast, four U.S. troops were wounded, but most of those killed and injured were civilians, including Hoda Ali Mahmoud, a 30-year-old woman whose young son was killed. She had taken him to the hospital for treatment for a cold.
“The glass flew at us,” she said, sobbing as she sat up in hospital. “His nose was hit and he couldn’t breathe.”
The body of her son, less than two years old, lay on the morgue floor at Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad, where many of the wounded were brought.
Hasna Aboud’s son, who was due to get married next week, was also killed. “My 22-year-old son was killed while trying to bring me some medicine,” she said through her tears. “I lost my only son.”
Police sources said one of those killed in Mahmoudiya may have been the secretary-general of the Iraqi Workers Party, a member of the Iraqi parliament. No other details were immediately available.
The bombings are the latest in a series of suicide attacks and car bomb blasts that have killed nearly 200 people since last Friday, in what appears to be an increase in violence by insurgents ahead of December 15 parliamentary elections.
A little known group called “The Supporters for the Sunni Community” claimed the Hilla attack, an Internet statement said.
www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10107233/