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A general view of the site of the bomb attack
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Additional
Reporting By Subhy Haddad, IOL Correspondent
BAGHDAD,
October 12 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – At least seven
people were killed and scores others wounded Sunday, October 12, in a
huge bombing targeting Baghdad Hotel, which houses members of the
U.S.-appointed interim Governing Council.
Muwaffak
al-Rubai, a council member who was inside the hotel at the time of the
attack, told the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera television that at least seven
people were killed and several more injured in the blast.
"There
are at least seven martyrs" who died in the "terrorist
act," said Rubai, who was slightly wounded in the hand.
The
Iraqi official said none of his council colleagues were inside the
hotel when bombed.
IslamOnline.net
correspondent confirmed the Baghdad Hotel is residence for a number of
the Governing Council members, especially those representing the
Kurdistan Autonomous Region.
According
to the BBC News Online, the Baghdad Hotel is believed to be a
headquarters of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Iraqi
eyewitnesses and police sources told IOL that the hotel, situated on
the tourist Abu-Nawas Street and the crowded Saadoun Street, not far
from the center of Baghdad, was partly damaged and a number of cars
have been destroyed.
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Iraqis evacuate a wounded man |
High
tongues of fire and smoke were still coming out of the hotel about one
hour after the explosion that took place at about 13:00 local time
(10:00 GMT).
Quoting
police sources, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said two car bombs went off
at a checkpoint outside the Baghdad Hotel.
A
car driven by a "suicide" bomber, and another packed with
explosives and parked outside the hotel, blew up simultaneously, a
police officer at the scene said.
The
explosion occurred after police sought to stop two cars at a
checkpoint outside the hotel, a witness said.
"There
was shooting as police tried to keep the cars away," said Saad
Mahmud, a local journalist whose offices are close to the hotel.
An
AFP correspondent at the scene saw limbs scattered some 100 meters
(yards) from the site of the explosion.
A
huge cloud of smoke rose from the area as U.S. armored vehicles moved
in and helicopters hovered overhead.
U.S.
troops who replaced Iraqi police at the scene prevented anyone from
leaving the hotel, and kept passers-by 100 meters from the scene.
More
Blasts
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A U.S. helicopter flying over the bombed hotel |
A
few minutes before the time of the Baghdad Hotel blast, another
explosion caused by a mine planted at Haifa Street, not far from the
former Iraqi Information Ministry building, destroyed a car carrying a
Shiite scholar and at least three other cars, reported IOL
correspondent.
The
explosion caused the destruction of a number of apartment flats and
houses on both sides of the street.
A
third explosion took place at Al-Hurriya Square at the end of the
northwest Baghdad Karrada district, few meters from a crowded petrol
filling station.
It
was not known whether the explosion has caused any human casualties at
the petrol station, usually crowded with hundreds of cars.
The
attack was evidence for a clear leakage in U.S. and Iraqi security
measures to protect such sensitive premises, where U.S. officers and
Iraqi officials reside, observers said.
U.S.-led
forces occupying Iraq had set up cement blocks around the hotel to
secure the facility following the August 19 bombing
of the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad that killed 22 people,
including the top U.N. envoy.
Another
massive car bombing killed leading Shiite scholar and politician
Ayatollah Mohammad Baqer
al-Hakim and 82 others in the Shiite holy city of An-Najaf, 180
kilometers south of Baghdad, on August 29.
Council
member Akila
al-Hashimi breathed her last Thursday, September 25, from wounds
sustained in an assassination attempt on her life on September 20.