Suicide car bombers kill 41 in central Baghdad

BAGHDAD, (Reuters) – Three suicide bombers detonated  car bombs within moments of each other in a coordinated attack  on foreign embassies in central Baghdad yesterday, killing as  many as 41 people and wounding more than 200.

The blasts near the Iranian, Egyptian and German embassies  followed mortar attacks on the Iraqi capital’s Green Zone, home  to government buildings, official residences and foreign  embassies. On Friday, gunmen slaughtered 24 people in a Sunni  village south of Baghdad.

Authorities had warned of a possible escalation of violence  because of rising tension after a March 7 parliamentary election  that Iraqis hoped would bring stability to their country  produced no clear winner.

The outcome promises weeks of potentially divisive talks to  form a government. Secularist former Prime Minister Iyad  Allawi’s cross-sectarian Iraqiya coalition won two seats more  than the State of Law bloc led by Shi’ite Prime Minister Nuri  al-Maliki.

Such drawn-out talks could leave a power vacuum for  insurgents to exploit, analysts have warned. Sectarian violence  exploded when politicians took more than five months to form a  government after parliamentary elections in 2005.

“The terrorists seized this time between the end of the  elections and the forming of the government to target the  political process,” said civil defence official Abdul-Rasoul  al-Zaidi.

One bomb blew up in front of the main gate of the Iranian  embassy, just outside the Green Zone, destroying about 30 cars.  The Iraqi Finance Ministry said the nearby offices of its budget  directorate and the government real estate bank were damaged.

“This is enough. We are tired of explosions, we do not feel  safe,” said Jassim Mohammed, 39, who was wounded in the head,  arm and leg. “We go out of our homes and we do not know whether  we will come back or not.”

A man who went to the scene began crying and moaning when he  realised his brother’s mini-bus had been destroyed by the blast.  “Why did they kill him? He got married a week ago,” he said.

At the Egyptian embassy, the bomber rammed his car into a  concrete blast wall, causing a 3 metre (10 ft) deep cater in the  street.

“The car crashed into the blast wall and the guards of the  embassy shot the terrorist but he went and blew himself up,”  Baghdad security spokesman Qassim al-Moussawi said. “The same  thing happened with the Iranian embassy.”

Moussawi said Iraqi security forces defused a fourth car  bomb in the al-Masbah district of central Baghdad and arrested  the would-be bomber.

Germany’s Foreign Ministry said an Iraqi security guard  working for the German embassy was among the dead.

“I completely condemn the bomb attacks in Baghdad,” said  German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle. “Our solidarity goes  out to the Iraqi people and we will continue to support their  efforts for peace and democracy.”

An Interior Ministry source said the three bombings killed  41 people and wounded 249. Moussawi put the toll at 20 dead and  256 wounded.

The car bombings followed a series of other incidents in the  Iraqi capital. Two mortar rounds landed in the Green Zone early  on Sunday and four on Saturday night.

A roadside bomb that targeted a police patrol in the capital  on Sunday wounded five officers and five civilians. A bomb  attached to a civilian vehicle in Baghdad’s southern Saidiya  district killed two people on Saturday.

Security forces had predicted a rise in violence after the  tight election race exposed the depth of Iraq’s sectarian  divide. Allawi’s Iraqiya bloc won with strong support in  Sunni-dominated provinces in the north and west, while Maliki  won in predominantly Shi’ite provinces in the south.