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13 Killed As Bomber Strikes in Iraq

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  • 13 Killed As Bomber Strikes in Iraq

    13 Killed As Bomber Strikes in Iraq

    Monday April 2, 2007 10:46 AM
    By YAHYA BARZANJI
    Associated Press Writer

    KIRKUK, Iraq (AP) - A suicide truck bomber targeted a police station
    in the oil-rich northern city of Kirkuk on Monday, killing at least 13
    people and wounding dozens, including many children from a nearby
    school, police said.

    The attacker rammed the truck into the concrete blast barriers
    protecting the back of the compound at about 11:30 a.m., detonating
    his explosives, which were hidden under a load of flour, local police
    spokesman Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qadir said.

    The Rahim Awa police compound is in a predominantly Kurdish
    neighborhood in a northern part of the city, and other officials said
    U.S. troops had been visiting an Iraqi criminal investigations unit
    when the blast occurred.

    AP Television News footage showed one U.S. soldier seen standing
    nearby with a bandage around his head and blood on the front of his
    uniform. The U.S. command in Baghdad said it was looking into the
    report.

    He said 13 people were killed and 137 wounded. He also said at least
    20 children on their way home from a nearby school were among the
    casualties, although he could not provide a breakdown of how many were
    killed or injured. The force of the blast also devastated four
    buildings in the area.

    Doctors at the hospital worked in a scene of bloody pandemonium as
    wounded were brought to the emergency room. There was barely room to
    move.

    Most of those being treated appeared to be either very young children
    or schoolgirls, many crying and with blood spattered on their
    clothes. Several badly mutilated dead bodies filled the back of a
    police pickup truck as a U.S. helicopter flew overhead.

    The attack comes days after the Iraqi government endorsed plans to
    relocate thousands of Arabs who were moved to Kirkuk as part of Saddam
    Hussein's campaign to force ethnic Kurds out of the city in an effort
    to undo one of the former dictator's most enduring and hated policies.

    Kurds are seeking to incorporate the city, 180 miles north of Baghdad,
    and into their nearby autonomous region. But the move has met strong
    opposition from Sunni Arabs who fear being isolated from Iraq's oil
    riches, which are concentrated in the north and the mainly Shiite
    south.

    Many have blamed a recent rise of violence in Kirkuk on Sunni
    insurgents who fled Baghdad ahead of a U.S.-Iraqi security crackdown
    in the capital.

    The ancient city of Kirkuk has a large minority of ethnic Turks as
    well as Christians, Shiite and Sunni Arabs, Armenians and
    Assyrians. The city is just south of the Kurdish autonomous zone
    stretching across three provinces of northeastern Iraq.

    Iraq's constitution sets an end-of-the-year deadline for a referendum
    on Kirkuk's status. Since Saddam's fall four years ago, thousands of
    Kurds who once lived in the city have resettled there. It is now
    believed Kurds are a majority of the population and that a referendum
    on attaching Kirkuk to the Kurdish autonomous zone would pass easily.
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