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Bombing at bus station kills 22 in Baghdad

The attack today leaves 40 vehicles in flames. At a popular market in the capital, mortar rounds kill two.

THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: WIDESPREAD VIOLENCE

June 28, 2007|Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Times Staff Writer

BAGHDAD — A bomb in a parked pickup truck exploded at a crowded bus station here this morning, killing at least 22 people and injuring 35 in the Bayaa neighborhood.

About 40 buses were still on fire an hour after the attack.


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Elsewhere, several mortar rounds struck the large wholesale Shorja market, killing at least two people and injuring 14.

Today's attacks followed bombings, ambushes and shootings that killed nine members of Iraq's security forces and at least two dozen civilians Wednesday throughout the country.

Most of the violence occurred in the capital, where the U.S. military has boosted troop deployment in an effort to improve security.

A car bomb exploded in the mostly Shiite Muslim neighborhood of Kadhimiya, killing at least 14 people and wounding 21, police said. Kadhimiya was struck June 6 by two nearly simultaneous car bombs that killed at least seven people and wounded about 30.

A roadside bomb in east Baghdad killed a U.S. soldier and wounded four others, the U.S. military said.

A bomb planted under a car near the popular Suleikh market in Baghdad killed three people and injured 10.

A police officer was killed and six bystanders were injured by a suicide car bombing at a checkpoint on a bridge in south Baghdad.

Witnesses said U.S. troops opened fire on civilians in the sprawling Sadr City neighborhood of the capital after a passerby fired a revolver into the air to settle a family dispute. The ensuing gunfire left two men dead and three injured, the witnesses said.

A spokesman for the U.S. military said he had not received reports of soldiers firing at civilians. A military police unit was in Sadr City to deliver a generator, the spokesman said.

Members of the unit drew their weapons after they spotted a suspected suicide bomber approaching, then traded shots with about five other men, killing one, the spokesman said.

In west Baghdad, police said gunmen opened fire on a bus headed to the southern holy city of Najaf, injuring five, including the driver. Militants also shot and killed two farmers driving to Baghdad from the northern city of Balad to sell vegetables.

Police recovered the bodies of 21 unidentified men in the capital, all shooting victims. Most were dumped in west Baghdad.

But Wednesday's violence was not confined to the capital.

In one attack, four Iraqi police commandos were killed and three injured by a bomb that exploded under their car during a routine patrol in Samarra.

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