Attack on Baghdad police academy kills 43 (AP) Updated: 2005-12-07 08:38
Two suicide bombers detonated explosives inside Baghdad's main police academy
Tuesday, killing at least 43 people and wounding more than 70, police said.
Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for the attack, the capital's deadliest
in months.
The bombing came as Al-Jazeera aired an insurgent video claiming to have
kidnapped a U.S. security consultant �� the seventh Westerner abducted in Iraq
since Nov. 26 �� and the U.S. military reported another American soldier killed
in a roadside bombing in Baghdad.
Late Tuesday, another suicide bomber blew himself up in a cafe frequented by
police in a Shiite neighborhood, killing three people and wounding 20, police
said. One of the dead and three of the wounded were policemen, officials said.
The assault on the police academy was carefully planned to maximize
casualties, all of whom were police officers or cadets.
Two reserve U.S. Army Military Policemen
secure the area outside Al Kindi hospital where the injured were taken in
Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday Dec. 6, 2005, after two suicide bombers strapped
with explosives blew themselves up at Baghdad's police academy.
[AP] | The first bomber struck near a group of
students outside a classroom, a U.S. military statement said.
Thinking they were under mortar fire, survivors rushed to a bunker "where the
second bomber detonated his vest," the statement added. One of the wounded was
an American contractor.
A statement on an Islamist Web site in the name of al-Qaida in Iraq said "two
blessed brothers" staged the attack on the academy "which continues to produce
the dogs that shed the blood and violate the honor of Sunni Muslims."
The claim's authenticity could not be independently verified, but al-Qaida in
Iraq's leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, has often denounced Shiites because of
religious differences and their leading role in the U.S.-backed government.
Shiites dominate the security services.
Iraqi police also said the attackers may have been policemen or students,
fresh evidence that insurgents have infiltrated the country's security forces.
US President Bush has linked an eventual U.S. troop withdrawal to the ability of
Iraq's army and police to combat the insurgents.
The attack was the deadliest against Iraqi security forces since Feb. 28,
when a suicide car bomber struck a crowd of mostly Shiite police and army
recruits in Hillah, killing 125. In September, at least 88 people were killed in
a suicide car bombing in a heavily Shiite neighborhood of Baghdad.
U.S. and Iraqi officials have warned of an increase in insurgent attacks
ahead of the Dec. 15 elections. Residents of Ramadi reported seeing fliers
Tuesday in the name of al-Qaida in Iraq warning people not to vote and
threatening to bomb polling stations.
First reports said two women had attacked the police academy, but the report
was later retracted. Officials said the report was based on the fact that two
women had been allowed inside the compound without a body search because no
female officers were available to perform it.
"We were sitting in the yard when we heard an explosion," said police Maj.
Wisam al-Heyali. "Seconds later, we were hit by another explosion as we were
running. I saw some of my colleagues falling down and I felt my hand hit, but I
kept on running."
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