Gunmen seized 10 workers from a bakery Sunday in a predominantly Shiite neighborhood in Baghdad, while a car bomb exploded near
a university in the northern city of Mosul, killing a woman
and wounding 19 other people, police said.
Relatives mourn for Ahmed Ali, 32, who was killed in
Friday's bomb attack on the Buratha mosque, one of Baghdad's most
important Shiite Mosques, which killed at least 10 people and wounded 20,
at his funeral in Najaf, Iraq Saturday, June 17,
2006.[AP]
|
The scattered attacks came after a day of unrelenting
violence that killed more than two dozen people as insurgents foiled heightened
security measures, dealing a blow to the Iraqi government's pledge to bring
peace to the capital.
The US military, meanwhile, combed through the "Triangle of Death," a
predominantly Sunni Arab region south of the capital for a second day looking
for two soldiers missing since an attack Friday on a traffic checkpoint that
also killed one of their comrades.
Thousands of US and Iraqi troops also set up outposts Sunday west of Baghdad
as part of an operation to establish Iraqi army bases in the volatile Sunni Arab
city of Ramadi.
US commanders stressed that the operation was not a large-scale assault on
the city, despite reports by Arab television networks and some Western outlets
of an impending attack on the city similar to the 2004 operation to root out
insurgents in Fallujah.
They said it was an "isolation" tactic to prevent insurgents from receiving
supplies or reinforcements from outside.
Two long columns of US and Iraqi armored vehicles met little resistance late
Saturday as they encircled the southern side Ramadi, the capital of volatile
Anbar province, although a handful of roadside bombs were discovered and
detonated.
Insurgents also fired two mortar shells that
landed about 500 yards away from where the troops were establishing the
outposts on Sunday. US troops fired back, but no injuries were
reported.
In this
still from video footage released by the US Army, Maj. Gen. William B.
Caldwell speaks during a press conference in Baghdad Iraq, Saturday, June
17, 2006. The US military said troops searched Saturday for two soldiers
that went missing after an attack that killed one of their comrades at a
traffic checkpoint in the so-called 'Triangle of Death' just south of
Baghdad. [AP] |
In Baghdad, gunmen arrived in two cars, broke into the bakery and abducted
the 10 workers in the northern suburb of Kazimiyah, police Lt. Mohammed Khayoun
said. It was the same neighborhood where a mortar shell struck a well-known
market Saturday, killing four people and wounding 13.
A mortar shell Sunday hit the al-Sadiq University for Islamic Studies on
Palestine Street, one of the capital's main thoroughfares, wounding five
students and a teacher, police Lt. Ahmed Qasim said.
The Mosul car bomb was apparently directed at US convoy. It exploded near
Mosul University, and most of the 19 wounded were female students, police Brig.
Abdel-Hamid Khala said.
Police also found the bullet-riddled bodies of 10 men who showed signs of
torture in several areas of Baghdad, and the body of a man who was shot in the
head was found in Karbala, 50 miles south of the capital.
Witnesses who said they saw Friday's attack against the American troops in a
volatile area south of Baghdad claimed the soldiers were led away by masked
gunmen. The reports could not be confirmed and the US military had no comment on
them.
Ahmed Khalaf Falah, a farmer, said three Humvees were manning a checkpoint
when they came under fire from many directions. Two of the vehicles went after
the assailants, but the third was ambushed before it could move, he told The
Associated Press.
Seven masked gunmen, including one with what he described as a heavy machine
gun, killed the driver of the third vehicle, then took the two other US soldiers
captive, the witness said.
The New York Times also reported in its Sunday editions that Iraqi residents
in the area said they saw two US soldiers taken prisoner by a group of masked
guerrillas. It said the two surviving soldiers were led to two cars and driven
away.
The US
military said Sunday it was continuing the search but had no new information to
provide.
Iraqi soldiers secure
the scene of a mini bus bomb attack, which killed four people, and wounded
14 in eastern Baghdad, June 17, 2006. [Reuters] |
The farmer also said tensions were high in the area as US soldiers raided
some houses and arrested men. He said the Americans were setting up checkpoints
on all roads leading to the area of the attack and helicopters were hovering at
low altitudes.
Falah did not give more details and no new raids were announced by the
military early Sunday.
The spree of bombings and mortar attacks in the Baghdad area -
including eight attacks Saturday that killed at least 27 people and wounded 27 - was an
embarrassment for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who ordered more police and
army checkpoints for the city last week to restore security for its 6 million
residents.