Gunmen in police uniforms raided bus stations Monday in central Baghdad, 
seizing at least 50 people, including drivers and passengers preparing to travel 
outside Iraq, an Interior Ministry official said. 
 
 
 |  An uncle, right, of an Iraqi soldier killed by 
 gunmen in Baqouba Sunday along with his two brothers and father, grieves 
 as the coffin of one of the brothers Layth Mahir, 13, is carried from the 
 hospital by relatives in Baqouba, Iraq Monday, June 5, 2006. 
 [AP]
 | 
The attackers also grabbed people working in the area, where several travel 
agencies are based and buses pick up passengers traveling mostly to Jordan, 
Syria and Lebanon, Lt. Colonel Falah al-Mohamedawi said. 
The victims, including two Syrians, were herded into more than a dozen 
vehicles, according to witnesses. It was not known who was behind the attack. 
"They took all workers from the companies and nearby shops," said Haidar 
Mohammed Eleibi, who works for the Swan Transportation Co. in the Salihiya 
business district. 
He said his brother and a cousin were among those detained, along with 
merchants, passers-by and even a vendor selling tea and sandwiches. 
"They did not give any reason for it," he said. "Police came afterward and 
did nothing." 
Another transportation worker, Amjad Hameed, said 15 cars belonging to police 
rushed to the area and began randomly seizing people. "We asked them why but 
nobody replied," he said, adding that Iraqi forces and Americans came to the 
site afterward. 
The dramatic attack came a day after masked gunmen stopped two minivans 
carrying students north of Baghdad, ordered the passengers off, separated 
Shiites from Sunni Arabs, and killed the 21 Shiites "in the name of Islam," a 
witness said. 
Haqi Ismail, a 48-year-old electrician, told The Associated Press that the 
attackers ordered the Shiites to lie down, and before they opened fire, one 
shouted, "On behalf of Islam, today we will dig a mass grave for you. You are 
traitors." 
In predominantly Shiite southern Basra, police hunting for militants stormed 
a Sunni Arab mosque early Sunday, just hours after a car bombing. Nine people 
were killed in the ensuing firefight. 
The surge in attacks has dealt a blow to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's 
pledge to curb sectarian violence. He also failed again to reach consensus 
Sunday among Iraq's ethnic and sectarian parties on candidates for interior and 
defense minister ¡ª posts he must fill to implement his ambitious plan to take 
control of security from U.S.-led forces within 18 months. 
Violence linked to Shiite and Sunni Arab animosity has grown increasingly 
worse since Feb. 22, when bombs ravaged the golden dome of a revered Shiite 
mosque in predominantly Sunni Arab Samarra. 
Sectarian tensions have run particularly high in Baghdad, Basra and Diyala 
province, a mixed Sunni Arab-Shiite region. And Sunday's attacks came just days 
after terrorist mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi renewed his call for Sunni Arabs 
to take up arms against Shiites, whom he often vilifies as infidels. 
On Monday, gunmen in a car killed two Sunni brothers as they were driving to 
college in the religiously mixed neighborhood of Sadiyah in southwestern 
Baghdad, police Lt. Maitham Abdul Razzaq said. The victims, Ahmed and Arkan 
Sarhan, were in their early 20s. 
Police also found the blindfolded and bound body of a man who had been shot 
in the head and chest and another body that had been shot in the head in 
separate locations in Baghdad. 
Elsewhere, U.S.-led forces fired artillery at the train station in the 
western city of Ramadi, in volatile Anbar province, "targeting four 
military-aged males unloading a weapons cache," according to the U.S.-Iraqi 
Joint Operations Center. 
A hospital official, Dr. Omar al-Duleimi, said five civilians were killed and 
15 wounded by American forces in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad. 
The Joint Operations Center said the mission had "positive effects on the 
target," but it denied the report that civilians were killed or injured. 
The influential Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, meanwhile, warned the 
U.S.-backed Iraqi government against participating in any assaults against 
Anbar, a vast province that stretches from western Baghdad to the borders with 
Syria and Jordan. 
"Its consequences would be very dangerous for the Iraqi society and for the 
government," said Mohammed Bashar al-Faidi, a spokesman for the Sunni group 
believed to have links to insurgents. 
Al-Maliki has said that his government was working on a plan to restore 
security to the provincial capital of Ramadi and that Iraqi forces would work 
with U.S. troops. 
U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said last week that 
American forces are "very concerned" about the situation in Ramadi because 
al-Qaida in Iraq is taking advantage of sectarian differences to make inroads in 
the city west of Baghdad. About 1,500 U.S. combat troops have been moved from 
Kuwait to Anbar province to help establish order.