BAGHDAD - In a dawn strike Friday, unidentified gunmen attacked the house of 
the police chief in Baqouba, northeast of Baghdad, killing his wife, two 
brothers and 11 guards, Diyala provincial police reported. 
 
 
 |  In this photo released by the US Air Force, Honor Guard 
 members from the 407th Expeditionary Group in Ali Air Base, Iraq, perform 
 a flag folding ceremony during a Fallen Airmen Ceremony in remembrance of 
 Staff Sgt John Self at Ali Air Base on Monday May 28, 2007. [AP]
 
  | 
The attackers also abducted two 
sons and two daughters of police chief Col. Ali Ahmed, police said. Ahmed wasn't 
home at the time, they said. The children's ages and other details of the attack 
were not immediately available. 
Diyala province, and especially the city of Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of 
Baghdad, has been torn by violence in recent weeks as al Qaida in Iraq and 
affiliated groups have battled Iraqi security forces, the US military and some 
local insurgent groups that have turned against al Qaida. 
Later in the morning in southern Iraq, a parked minibus exploded at a bus 
terminal in the town of Qurna, and a hospital director said at least 16 people 
were killed and 32 wounded. 
A witness, taxi driver Salim Abdul-Hussein, 35, said the blast damaged the 
terminal and many cars and surrounding shops, striking an area crowded each 
morning with farmers coming to town to shop and sell their produce and animals 
in Qurna, 225 miles south of Baghdad. 
Maj. Gen. Mohammed Hammadi, police chief in Basra, the provincial capital 60 
miles to the south, said a minibus loaded with rockets, ammunition, C4 
explosives and benzene blew up and caused a nearby car to explode in flames - 
leading to an early report of two car bombs. 
Police cordoned off the area and arrested two Egyptian suspects, he said. 
Hammadi said eight people were killed and 28 wounded. Another police source, 
speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to deal with 
the press, said 15 people were killed. At Qurna hospital, director Ali Qassim 
told The Associated Press by telephone the hospital had received 16 bodies from 
the explosions and 32 wounded. 
In other violence, unknown gunmen speeding by in the northern city of Kirkuk 
shot and killed a soldier, Adnan Mahmoud, as he drove with his 2-year-old 
daughter around 6:30 a.m. Friday. The child also was killed, said police Capt. 
Jassim Abdullah. 
In Baghdad, US Army artillery fired at least nine rounds Friday morning into 
a Sunni Muslim-dominated farming area in the city's southwestern sections of 
Arab Jibor and Albu Aitha, police reported. A police officer, who asked 
anonymity as he was not authorized to talk to media, said the shelling targeted 
"selective areas" where Sunni militants were active.