A car bomb also exploded near a square near a U.S. military convoy in central
Baghdad, wounding at least 11 civilians, including a young girl, said police
Maj. Abbas Mohammed Selman. U.S. forces closed off the area, and it was not
immediately known if there were American casualties.
Bombs in two cars parked about 100 yards apart then exploded one after
another near Iraqi police patrols in the New Baghdad part of the capital,
wounding three policemen and three civilians, said police Lt. Ali Abass.
That was followed by a car bomb that targeted a police patrol in the Mansur
area of Baghdad, wounding three policemen and four civilians, said police Capt.
Jamil Hussein.
Police in Abu Ghraib, just outside Baghdad, found a small truck containing
the bodies of 15 men who had been tortured in captivity, said police Lt. Maitham
Abdul Razzaq. Two other corpses were found in southwest Baghdad; one appeared to
have been hanged, said police Capt. Qassim Hassan. Three bodies were found in
the northern city of Mosul, including that of a university student who had been
kidnapped hours earlier, police said.
On Sunday, at least three U.S. soldiers and 31 Iraqis were killed, including
seven who died when mortars hit just outside the heavily guarded Green Zone in
Baghdad, not far from Iraq's Defense Ministry.
Sunni Arabs say Shiite militias have infiltrated the Interior Ministry ¡ª
controlled by the biggest Shiite party ¡ª and used death squads to kill Sunnis
following the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine in Samarra, north of Baghdad.
But the killings have gone both ways.
Police said the bodies of six Shiites were found Sunday in the mainly Sunni
district of Azamiyah in Baghdad, their hands and legs bound and their bodies
showing signs of torture. Two more bodies were found in a mixed district south
of Baghdad.
The chief of the Azamiyah district council, Sheik Hassan Sabri Salman, said
relatives also identified the bodies of 14 Sunnis kidnapped last week. The
bodies were handcuffed with signs of torture, he said. Police did not confirm
the deaths.
The Iraqi Islamic Party, the main Sunni faction in parliament and a likely
participant in the next Cabinet, warned of "the repercussions of sectarian
cleansing." It urged the new government to stop "the criminal gangs" involved in
the killings.
Khalilzad also said Iraq's next government must decommission sectarian
militias and integrate them into the national armed forces, warning that the
armed groups represent the "infrastructure for civil war." He spoke at a news
conference with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in the northern city of Irbil.
A key question will be control of the Interior Ministry, currently held by
the Shiite Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. The SCIRI ran the
feared Badr Brigade militia during Saddam Hussein's rule but insists the group
has given up arms, a claim many Sunnis reject.