BAGHDAD, Iraq - Masked Shiite gunmen roamed through west Baghdad's Jihad 
neighborhood Sunday, dragging Sunnis from their cars, picking them out on the 
street and killing them in a rampage that police said killed 41 people in a 
dramatic escalation of sectarian violence. 
 
 
 |  A mother cries over 
 her young boy wounded in crossfire during street fights, Sunday, July 9, 
 2006, in the Jihad area of western Baghdad, Iraq. Gunmen stopped cars in 
 western Baghdad, grabbing people from the street and separating Sunni 
 Arabs from the rest, killing at least 37 people, police said, in a 
 dramatic escalation of sectarian violence in the country. 
 [AP]
 | 
Hours later, two car bombs exploded 
near a Shiite mosque in the city's north, killing 17 people and wounding 38 in 
what appeared to be a reprisal attack, police said.
Black-clad Shiite militiamen manned checkpoints on roads into most major 
Shiite neighborhoods to guard against revenge attacks, as scattered clashes 
occurred across the Iraqi capital.
Sunni leaders expressed outrage over the killings, and President Jalal 
Talabani, a Kurd, appealed for calm, warning that the nation stood "in front of 
a dangerous precipice."
Presidential security adviser Wafiq al-Samaraie told Al-Jazeera television 
that "we are at the gates of civil war" unless "exceptional measures" are taken.
A senior government official, Haidar Majid, contested the police figures, 
saying late Sunday that only nine people died in Jihad. Police Lt. Mohammed 
Khayoun insisted the figure of 41 was correct - with 24 bodies taken to Yarmouk 
hospital and 17 to the city morgue. There was no way to reconcile the 
discrepancy.
Regardless, the brazen attack was likely to further enflame Shiite-Sunni 
tensions and undermine public confidence in Iraq's new unity government. It also 
raises new questions about the effectiveness of the Iraqi police and army to 
curb sectarian violence in the capital.
The trouble started about 10 a.m. when several carloads of gunmen drove into 
the Jihad area along the main road to Baghdad International Airport, police and 
witnesses said. The gunmen stopped cars, checked passengers' identification 
cards and shot dead those with Sunni names.
Masked gunmen wearing black clothes roamed the streets, abducting Sunnis 
whose bodies were found later scattered throughout the religiously mixed 
neighborhood, an Interior Ministry official said. He spoke on condition of 
anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to media.
U.S. and Iraqi forces sealed off the area, and residents said American troops 
using loudspeakers announced a two-day curfew. Black smoke from burning tires 
wafted through the streets.
Another policeman, Lt. Maitham Abdul-Razzaq, 
also said 41 bodies had been collected and taken to hospitals. Some Sunni 
clerics put the death toll at more than 50 in Jihad, a once prosperous 
neighborhood of handsome villas owned by officials of Saddam Hussein's security 
services.
Residents contacted by telephone told of gunmen systematically rounding up 
and massacring Sunni men.