Bomb at market in northern Iraq kills 30

BAGHDAD, (Reuters) – A minivan packed with explosives  blew up at a crowded market in Iraq’s troubled northern Diyala  province yesterday, killing at least 30 people and wounding 80  others, police and officials said.  

The attack took place near a crowded cafe just steps from  the headquarters of a police rapid-response unit in the town of  Khalis, about 80 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.  
The bomb exploded around sunset when the area was filled  with shoppers. 

“The blast was severe. Many shops were destroyed and the  roofs collapsed,” police lieutenant Abdul Jabar Ihmoid said.  “The roof of the coffee shop, which was full of people, also  collapsed. We believe there are people still under the debris.”  

Sadeq al-Hussaini, a member of the Diyala provincial  council, said the bomb had killed at least 30 people and wounded  80. 
 
Overall violence in Iraq has dropped sharply since the  sectarian slaughter of 2006-07 but bombings are still a regular  occurrence and the insurgency unleashed by the 2003 U.S.  invasion remains entrenched in mainly Sunni Diyala and other  parts of northern Iraq. 
 
Khalis was the scene of a market bombing in March that  killed nearly 60 people.  
On Monday gunmen wearing Iraqi military uniforms beheaded an  imam who had recently criticised al Qaeda and hung his head on  an electricity pole in the Diyala village of Saadiya. 
 
Police said they wanted to know how attackers had managed to  get the minivan into the Khalis market area, where vehicles need  special permits to travel.  

“We are doing an investigation. We want to know how that  vehicle reached this place,” said a police official who asked to  remain anonymous. “Not all vehicles are allowed in this area.”