Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Triple car bomb attack kills 25 in Iraqi town

-

Three suicide car bomb attacks against offices in a Kurdish-controlled Iraqi town killed at least 25 people on Sunday, most of them Kurdish forces veterans volunteering to re-enlist, officials said.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed the attack via affiliated Twitter accounts, saying the three suicide bombers were from Germany, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

"At 10:30 this morning (0730 GMT), three car bombs struck Qara Tapah," said Mayor Wahab Ahmed, who was lightly wounded in the attack.

Qara Tapah lies close to Jalawla, a key battleground northeast of Baghdad between pro-government forces and IS jihadists.

The mayor said the three car bombs targeted his office, a building used by the Kurds' asayesh internal security service and an office of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party.

Ahmed said nearby buildings used by the electricity department and the Kurdish peshmerga forces' veterans affairs bureau were also seriously damaged in the explosions.

Map of Iraq locating attacks on security forces and civilians on October 12  2014
Map of Iraq locating attacks on security forces and civilians on October 12, 2014
P. Deré, J. Jacobsen, AFP

A high-ranking security official in the autonomous Kurdish regional government put the death toll at 27 and said most of the dead were peshmerga veterans who had volunteered to return to active duty to fight IS.

"Twenty-four of the victims are peshmerga veterans," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to talk to the press.

"They had come to join the front against IS. There are still victims trapped in the debris," he said.

A local federal army official could confirm 25 deaths.

Twitter accounts affiliated with IS relayed a claim naming the three suicide bombers as Abu Sara al-Almani (German), Abu Mohammed al-Jazrawi (Saudi) and Abu Turab al-Turki (Turkey).

Confessionally and ethnically mixed Diyala province, which borders Iran, has seen intense fighting pitting militants of IS against Iraqi federal troops, and their Kurdish and Shiite militia allies.

In the provincial capital Baquba Sunday, a roadside bomb blast in a busy neighbourhood called Al-Dhabbat killed six civilians, a police captain and a doctor at Baquba hospital said.

It was not immediately clear who the explosion targeted.

Two women and a child were among those killed and several others were among the 10 people also wounded in the blast, the sources said.

A woman was killed and two children wounded when another bomb targeted a policeman's home in Baquba's Shifta neighbourhood, the same sources said.

Three suicide car bomb attacks against offices in a Kurdish-controlled Iraqi town killed at least 25 people on Sunday, most of them Kurdish forces veterans volunteering to re-enlist, officials said.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed the attack via affiliated Twitter accounts, saying the three suicide bombers were from Germany, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

“At 10:30 this morning (0730 GMT), three car bombs struck Qara Tapah,” said Mayor Wahab Ahmed, who was lightly wounded in the attack.

Qara Tapah lies close to Jalawla, a key battleground northeast of Baghdad between pro-government forces and IS jihadists.

The mayor said the three car bombs targeted his office, a building used by the Kurds’ asayesh internal security service and an office of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party.

Ahmed said nearby buildings used by the electricity department and the Kurdish peshmerga forces’ veterans affairs bureau were also seriously damaged in the explosions.

Map of Iraq locating attacks on security forces and civilians on October 12  2014

Map of Iraq locating attacks on security forces and civilians on October 12, 2014
P. Deré, J. Jacobsen, AFP

A high-ranking security official in the autonomous Kurdish regional government put the death toll at 27 and said most of the dead were peshmerga veterans who had volunteered to return to active duty to fight IS.

“Twenty-four of the victims are peshmerga veterans,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to talk to the press.

“They had come to join the front against IS. There are still victims trapped in the debris,” he said.

A local federal army official could confirm 25 deaths.

Twitter accounts affiliated with IS relayed a claim naming the three suicide bombers as Abu Sara al-Almani (German), Abu Mohammed al-Jazrawi (Saudi) and Abu Turab al-Turki (Turkey).

Confessionally and ethnically mixed Diyala province, which borders Iran, has seen intense fighting pitting militants of IS against Iraqi federal troops, and their Kurdish and Shiite militia allies.

In the provincial capital Baquba Sunday, a roadside bomb blast in a busy neighbourhood called Al-Dhabbat killed six civilians, a police captain and a doctor at Baquba hospital said.

It was not immediately clear who the explosion targeted.

Two women and a child were among those killed and several others were among the 10 people also wounded in the blast, the sources said.

A woman was killed and two children wounded when another bomb targeted a policeman’s home in Baquba’s Shifta neighbourhood, the same sources said.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

A leading German auto supplier said Friday it has received permission to export Nexperia chips from China again.

World

For most people, nuclear weapons belong to history. 

Business

France, Spain and Kenya are among a group of countries spearheading a drive at the COP30 climate summit for a new tax on luxury...

Business

An employee opens a massive security door inside the storage room of Tradium, a company specialised in trading rare earths, near Frankfurt, western Germany...