Car bombs killed at least 16 people and injured dozens Sunday in Baghdad and 
a Shiite holy city, casting doubt on U.S. hopes that formation of a new 
government alone would provide a quick end to the country's violence. 
 
 
 |  Iraqi police inspect 
 the scene following a car bomb explosion at the printing department of 
 local newspapers in Baghdad, Sunday, May 7, 2006. Three car bombs rocked 
 northern Baghdad Sunday morning within a span of half an hour while 
 another struck the Shiite holy cityof Karbala, killing at least 17 and 
 wounding 44. [AP]
 | 
At least 26 others were killed or found dead Sunday, including a U.S. Marine 
mortally wounded in the insurgent bastion of Anbar province in western 
Iraq, police and the U.S. military said.
Some of the victims appeared to have been abducted and killed by sectarian 
"death squads" that target members of rival religious communities. The dead 
included three brothers whose charred bodies were found before dawn in Baghdad's 
Dora district, a mixed Sunni-Shiite area and one of the city's most violent.
The deadliest single attack occurred at midmorning when a suicide driver 
detonated his vehicle near an Iraqi army patrol leaving its base in the Sunni 
Arab neighborhood of Azamiyah, killing 10 people and injuring 15, most of them 
Iraqi soldiers, police Lt. Col. Falah al-Mohammedawi said.
A half-hour earlier, a car bomb exploded near the Baghdad offices of the 
state-run al-Sabah newspaper, killing an employee, police Lt. Ahmed Mohammed Ali 
said. Officials believed the target was a police patrol that passed by shortly 
before the blast.
In Karbala, a Shiite holy city 60 miles south of Baghdad, a suicide car 
bomber exploded his vehicle near the main provincial government building, 
killing five people and wounding 19, police spokesman Rahman Mishawi said.
The bomber was unable to reach the government building because of concrete 
barricades and a police cordon and instead set off his explosives about 300 
yards away, police said.
Elsewhere, three policemen were killed in a roadside bombing in the northern 
city of Mosul, police said. Two bodies with gunshot wounds were found in the 
center of Mosul late Sunday, police said.
In Baghdad, police and unknown gunmen battled for nearly an hour Sunday in 
the capital's Saydiyah district. Three policemen were wounded and three gunmen 
were arrested, police said.
One man was killed and another injured in an explosion Sunday evening at a 
bombmaking factory in the basement of a Sunni mosque in central Baghdad, the 
U.S. military said. A bomb exploded in a restaurant late Sunday in Muqdadiyah, 
60 miles northeast of Baghdad, injuring dozens, provincial police said.
American troops also fired on a disused train station south of Ramadi, 
described in a U.S. statement as "a known hub of insurgent activity."
U.S. officials have long contended that violence would subside if Shiites, 
Sunnis and Kurds believed they had a stake in a new unity government 
representing all the nation's religious and ethnic communities.
The framework of Iraq's new unity government was put in place last month with 
the selection of a president, vice presidents, prime minister and parliament 
speaker. Incoming Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, hopes to present his 
Cabinet to parliament by Wednesday.
However, a top Shiite official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of 
the sensitivity of the deliberations, said al-Maliki would probably not meet 
that target because of differences among the parties over who will run the 
ministries of interior and defense.
Those posts control the police and army, and U.S. and British officials have 
insisted that the new ministers have no ties to militias believed responsible 
for kidnappings and killings of civilians.
Sectarian violence has forced about 14,700 Iraqi families ¡ª or about 88,000 
people ¡ª to flee their homes, a senior Iraqi official said Sunday. The official, 
Suhaila Abed Jaafar, doubted they could return without "concerted military 
action" to restore order in their communities.
"The solution is in the hands of the interior and defense ministries," 
Jaafar, the minister responsible for caring for displaced Iraqis, said.
In London, the British Defense Ministry said "up to five" British personnel 
had been killed in Saturday's helicopter crash in Basra. British officials have 
not confirmed Iraqi police and witness reports that the Lynx helicopter was shot 
down. 
Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, was calm Sunday after a day of violence 
when about 250 Iraqis cheered wildly, hurled stones and fired gunshots at 
British troops who had rushed to the crash scene. Five Iraqis, including a 
child, were killed in the melee, and several British troops were slightly 
injured. 
In a bid to ease tension, Basra Gov. Mohammed al-Waeli agreed Sunday to 
resume cooperation with British authorities, which he broke off four months ago 
after British troops cracked down on policemen with links to Shiite militias. 
Britain's new defense secretary, Des Browne, told Sky News that the unrest in 
Basra does not mean the security situation has deteriorated there, saying the 
number of rioters was small in a city of about 1.5 million.