ISKANDARIYAH, IRAQ - A car bomb exploded Tuesday morning at
a police station south of Baghdad as dozens of would-be recruits
lined up to apply for jobs, and a hospital official said at least
50 people were killed and 50 others wounded.
U.S. officials in Baghdad put the figure at 35 killed and 75
wounded but said the figure could be higher since Iraqi authorities
were handling the investigation. The local Iraqi police commander,
Lt. Col. Abdul Rahim Saleh, said the attack was a suicide
operation, carried out by a diver who detonated a red pickup as it
passed by the station.
"I am sure it was a vehicle," Saleh said. "We found its
engine. It was a suicide operation and a cowardly act."
The blast followed warnings from occupation officials that
insurgents would step up attacks against Iraqis who work with the
U.S.-led coalition, especially ahead of the planned June 30
transfer of sovereignty to a provisional Iraqi government.
On Monday, U.S. officials said a letter seized last month from
an al-Qaida courier asked the terrorist leadership to help foment
civil war here to undermine the coalition and the future Iraqi
leadership.
The purported author of the letter was Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a
Palestinian-Jordanian suspected of al-Qaida links. The author
boasted of having organized 25 suicide attacks in Iraq.
U.S. paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division sealed off the
area around the station and refused to allow journalists near the
blast site about 30 miles south of Baghdad.
In Baghdad, Lt. Col. Dan Williams, a coalition spokesman, said
no U.S. or other coalition forces were hurt.
Hospital director Razaq Jabbar said his facility had received 50
dead and 50 injured - all believed to be Iraqis. He said he had
heard that three others died at another hospital.
"This figure might increase," he said. "There were some body
parts that haven't been identified yet. Some more bodies may be
trapped under the rubble."
Policeman Wissam Abdul-Karim said he was standing in front of
the nearby courthouse when "I heard a very strong explosion" and
"the blast threw me on the ground."
"It was the day for applying for new recruits," Abdul-Karim
said. "There were tens of them waiting outside the police
station."
Security for the facility included a checkpoint surrounded by
sandbags and barbed wire, Abdul-Karim said.
Hussein Mohammed, 18, said he was standing in the public market
when he heard a tremendous explosion about 9:15 a.m. Another
witness, who refused to give his name, described the blast as
"really strong" and said body parts littered the street near the
station.
"There was not one body in one piece," he said.
Jabbar said some of the victims were policemen "but many more
were civilians applying for jobs, and passers-by."
Malik Moussa, a 63-year-old lawyer, said he was walking to the
police station when the blast occurred.
"I saw two cars totally burned out," Moussa said. "Blood was
gushing out of my right arm."
Insurgents have mounted a string of car and suicide bombings in
recent weeks. The deadliest so far has been in the northern city of
Irbil on Feb. 1 when two suicide bombers blew themselves up at two
Kurdish party offices celebrating a Muslim holiday, killing at
least 109 people.
On Jan. 18, a suicide car bomb exploded near the main gate to
the U.S.-led coalition's headquarters in Baghdad, killing at least
31 people.
A car bomb exploded Aug. 29 outside a mosque in the Shiite
Muslim holy city of Najaf, killing more than 85 people, including
Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim.
Meanwhile, the Baghdad Convention Center, which houses the U.S.
military press center and other coalition facilities, was evacuated
Tuesday after bomb-sniffing dogs detected something suspicious,
Williams, the coalition spokesman, said. The center later reopened.
On Monday, a suicide bomber walked up to the house of brothers
Majid and Amer Ali Suleiman in Ramadi, west of Baghdad, and
detonated explosives strapped to his body, witnesses said.
Three guards were seriously injured but the brothers - who are
among the city's most prominent tribal leaders working with
coalition forces - were unhurt.
The bomber had approached the house earlier when the brothers
were receiving callers, and was told to leave, the witnesses said.
Insurgents have repeatedly warned Iraqis not to cooperate with
the Americans. The most recent threats were contained in pamphlets
circulated in Ramadi and nearby Fallujah by a purported coalition
of 12 insurgent groups.
Ramadi and Fallujah are located in the Sunni Triangle, a major
center of resistance to the U.S.-led occupation.
It was the second instance of a suicide bomber carrying out an
attack with explosives on his body, although suicide car and truck
bombings are not unknown.
Also Monday, defense officials in Washington said American
forces in Iraq have detained one of the remaining most-wanted
members of Saddam Hussein's government.
Muhsin Khadr al-Khafaji, No. 48 on the 55 most-wanted list, was
turned over last weekend to U.S. troops in the Baghdad area, the
officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity.