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Security personnel gather near goldsmith shops after an attack by gunmen in Baghdad May 25, 2010. [Agencies] |
As one of their vehicles blocked the street to prevent a rescue, the gunmen opened fire on 12 shops, killing nine gold shop owners or their workers and two bystanders, police said. A hospital official confirmed the number of casualties.
The gunmen then scooped up the gold and fled. The value of the stolen gold was not known or revealed.
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There is a security checkpoint about 800 yards (meters) from the shops that were robbed.
Some of the shop owners had AK-47 rifles, not unusual in a country that has seen so much violence and where people often rely on themselves for protection. But the attack happened so quickly, they had little chance to use them.
Al-Moussawi, the military spokesman, said security forces killed one gunmen and arrested two.
A dead body that police and witnesses said belonged to one of the assailants was covered with a cloth on the bloodstained sidewalk among the shattered glass of shop windows.
An Iraqi security official said the sophisticated and highly orchestrated attack suggested al-Qaida, as did the use of pistols fixed with silencers.
He also said documents seized during an April raid resulting in the deaths of the two top al-Qaida in Iraq figures revealed instructions to rob banks, jewelry stores and exchange houses as a way to finance the group's activities.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly, as did police and hospital officials.