Suicide bomber kills 15 people in Iraq (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-27 21:49
A suicide bomber detonated his car Monday at the gate of the home of the
leader of Iraq's biggest political party, killing 15 people and injuring dozens,
police said. The cleric was unharmed.
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq — the country's most powerful Shiite political group — was in his
residence in Baghdad's Jadiriyah district when the attack occurred, said his
spokesman, Haitham al-Husseini.
 A guard stands amid
rubble in front of the home of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, the country's most
powerful Shiite political group, Monday Dec. 27 2004 after a suicide
bomber detonated his car killing 15 people and injuring dozens, police
said. [AP] | The blast, which shook the district
and sent a cloud of smoke high above the area, killed 15 people and injured at
least 50, said police Capt. Ahmed Ismail. Thirty-two cars on the street and near
the gates were destroyed or damaged.
"It was a suicide attack near the gate leading to the office," al-Husseini
said. "Several of the guards were killed and wounded."
Hakim also heads the candidate list of the 228-member United Iraqi Alliance
coalition, which is expected to dominate Iraq's new constitutional assembly
following the first free elections on Jan. 30. The coalition is supported by
Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
Al-Hakim's son, Ammar, accused Saddam Hussein's followers of being behind the
suicide attack.
"They are the remains of the dead regime and their allies who carried out
similar criminal acts in the past," he said, adding that many of the blast
victims were innocent civilians who happened to be on the street when the
explosion occurred.
The residence, where Hakim has his home and offices, was previously the house
of Tariq Aziz, a jailed former senior aide to Saddam Hussein who has been in
prison since April last year.
Political and religious leaders of the Shiite community, who strongly back
the holding of next month's vote, have been repeatedly targeted by the mainly
Sunni Muslim insurgents since Saddam's ouster.
The Shiites, who make up about 60 percent of Iraq's 26 million people, have
traditionally been dominated by the Sunni minority, which accounts for about a
fifth of the population. Their leaders are eager to translate that numerical
superiority into political power after next month's ballot — the first free
elections since the overthrow of the monarchy 45 years ago.
In another blow to Washington's plans for the upcoming elections, the largest
Sunni Muslim political party that had planned to take part in the Jan. 30 ballot
announced Monday it was pulling out of the race because of the rapidly
deteriorating security situation and the lack of public awareness about the
vote.
"The security situation keeps going from bad to worse and has to be dealt
with," said Mohsen Abdel-Hamid, the Iraqi Islamic Party's leader.
In August 2003, a suicide bomber killed Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim,
elder brother of Abdul Aziz and former leader of the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Like his late brother, Abdul Aziz Al-Hakim is a Shiite cleric who opposed
Saddam Hussein from exile in Iran before returning to Iraq after last year's
U.S.-led invasion.
Meanwhile, a U.S. soldier died of wounds Monday and another was injured in a
roadside bomb explosion in Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, the U.S. military
said in a statement.
The latest casualty brings to at least 1,324 the number of U.S. troops who
have died in Iraq since the beginning of the war in March 2003.
The violence came a day after the Iraqi militant group Ansar al-Sunnah Army
posted a video on the Internet purportedly showing footage from last week's
suicide attack at a U.S. base in Mosul. The group claimed that the bomber
slipped into the base through a hole in the fence during a guard change.
The footage showed a black-garbed gunman wearing an explosives belt around
his body — apparently the suicide bomber, identified in the tape as Abu Omar
al-Mosuli — bidding farewell to his comrades. The video gives no further details
about the bomber beyond his name.
The Ansar al-Sunnah Army had earlier said it would release a video of last
Tuesday's attack, which killed 22 people, including 18 U.S. service members and
civilian contractors.
The bombing — the deadliest attack on a U.S. base in Iraq — has prompted a
U.S. military investigation into how the bomber got onto the heavily guarded
site and how security at bases can be improved.
In the first section of the video — with a time signature of Dec. 20, a day
before the attack — three gunmen wearing black masks and clothes and holding
automatic rifles are shown sitting in front of a black banner with the group's
name on it. One of them, apparently al-Mosuli, sits on the left, wearing an
explosives belt.
The gunman in the center reads a statement describes how the attack will be
carried out. The authenticity of the video could not be independently verified.
The two men then embrace the one wearing the explosives belt.
An image then shows a map of the base, as one of the gunmen points out
locations using a military knife. One location is marked "the dining hall" in
Arabic.
A later outdoor video image — shot on Tuesday, when the attack occurred —
shows a fireball rising from the distance with the accompanying sound of the
explosion. A final image — shot from a vehicle driving past the base — shows the
torn white tent that served as the base mess hall.
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