Friday, December 2, 2011

Eight killed in Iraq attacks


BAGHDAD: Bomb and gun attacks in Iraq have killed eight people, including four anti-Qaeda militiamen, and wounded 12 others, security officials said on Friday.
“Four people were killed and seven wounded in two attacks by roadside bombs in the Taji area,” just north of Baghdad, an interior ministry official said.
The first attack targeted the home of Nadhem Karim Mohammed, a leader of anti-Qaeda Sahwa militia forces in Taji, killing him and his mother about 7:00 am, the official said.
When police arrived at the scene, another bomb went off, killing two police and wounding seven others.
Unknown gunmen attacked a Sahwa checkpoint in the Al-Sharqat area, 120 kilometres (75 miles) northeast of Tikrit, killing three Sahwa members and wounding two others, a police major said.
And in Al-Tuz, about 75 kilometres (45 miles) south of the northern oil city of Kirkuk, a magnetic “sticky bomb” on a car killed a policeman while a roadside bomb wounded three civilians, police Major Khaled al-Bayati said.
A security source also said that police had freed Ibrahim Zaki Khalaf al-Ajili, the teenage son of a well-known contractor in Tikrit, who was kidnapped on Thursday.
Ajili was freed about 110 kilometres (70 miles) south of Kirkuk, the source said, adding that two suspected kidnappers believed to belong to the Ansar al-Sunna insurgent group were detained.
Violence has declined in Iraq since its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 187 people were killed in November, according to official figures released on Thursday.

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