WordType Designs
Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 18-03-2004 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ Iraq ]

      [http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/World/2004/03/15/382476-ap.html

      Rescuers stop searching for survivors after suicide car bomb in Iraq
      By DANIEL COONEY

      BAGHDAD (AP) - U.S. soldiers and Iraqi rescuers stopped searching for survivors Thursday in the wreckage of a five-storey hotel and surrounding buildings after a massive suicide bombing. The U.S. military had said 27 people died but later revised the toll downward to 17.

      At least 45 people were wounded in the car bomb attack on the Mount Lebanon Hotel in the heart of Baghdad. One Briton was killed and another was injured, the British government said. Officials at the Foreign Affairs Department in Ottawa were unaware Wednesday of any Canadians being involved.

      U.S. army Col. Jill Morgenthaler confirmed the attack was a suicide bombing, but said the destroyed Mount Lebanon Hotel may not have been the intended target because the vehicle loaded with explosives was in the middle of the street, and not parked in front of the hotel.

      She said it was not clear what the target may have been. The hotel is in the middle of a busy district that is commercial and residential.

      Morgenthaler said 17 people were killed but gave no explanation for why the death toll was revised downward.

      The spokesman for the Iraqi Governing Council blamed al-Qaida for the blast but offered no evidence to support the accusation.
      "It is aimed at terrorizing the civilians, destabilizing the country and hampering the democratic march in the country," Hamid al-Kafaai said.

      A U.S. counterterrorism official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said al-Qaida-linked Jordanian Islamic militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is among those suspected of playing a key role.

      Rescuers pulled two more bodies from the rubble before dawn Thursday and smoke was still pouring from the site 12 hours after the explosion, which torched nearby homes, offices, cars and shops.

      The nationalities of all the dead were not immediately known, although the majority are expected to be Iraqi.

      A Moroccan, three Jordanians, two Britons, two Lebanese and an Egyptian were registered as having rooms in the Lebanese-owned hotel on the night of the blast, said hotel duty manager Bashir Abdel-Hadi, who left the building 10 minutes before the explosion.

      He said among those killed were the hotel's three security guards, who were standing in front of it at the time.

      Much of the damage from the blast was done to buildings surrounding the hotel. Across the street, the one-storey house of a Christian family of seven was virtually destroyed. AP reporters saw four bodies pulled from the wreckage.

      "I was sleeping in the room and then I heard a huge explosion. I ran out and then I was hit against the wall," said Jihad Abu Muslah while lying in Al Kindi Hospital with bandages over his face.

      Sixteen-year-old Walid Mohammed Abdel-Maguid, who lives near the hotel, said, "It was a huge boom followed by complete darkness and then the red glow of a fire." A U.S. soldier less than a kilometre away said the blast felt as though it were next door.
      Immediately after the explosion, dazed and wounded people stumbled from the wreckage, marked by a jagged, six-metre-wide crater. A father cradled his young daughter, who was limp in his arms. Coated in dust, some rescuers dug through the debris with bare hands as uniformed firefighters fought the blaze and ambulance workers stood by with orange stretchers.

      U.S.-funded Arabic Al-Hurra television station captured the blast on video. As a massive fire ball explodes into the night sky about a kilometre away and a second later a thunderous boom is heard, an Iraqi woman in a Muslim shawl who was about to be interviewed ducks for cover.

      U.S. army Col. Ralph Baker of the 1st Armoured Division estimated that the bomb contained 450 kilograms of explosives. He said the bomb was a mix of plastic explosives and artillery shells. That was the same mixture of explosives used in the Aug. 19 suicide attack on the UN headquarters in Baghdad, which killed 22 people.

      The Mount Lebanon was a so-called soft target because it did not have concrete blast barriers and other security measures that protect offices of the U.S.-led coalition and buildings where westerners live and work.

      The attack came just days before the first anniversary of the start of the U.S.-led war to topple Saddam Hussein. It took place behind Firdaus Square, where Iraqis toppled a bronze statue of Saddam on April 9 with the help of U.S. marines who had just entered the centre of the capital.

      Brig.-Gen. Mark Hertling, deputy commander of the U.S. army's 1st Armoured Division said he did not believe Iraqis linked to former ruling Baath party were behind the attack, saying that they are believed to be focusing attacks on U.S. soldiers.

      Referring to a possible role in the attack by al-Zarqawi, the counterterrorism official said that while there were other possibilities, the Jordanian has had a role in a number of large attacks.

      However, "it's not his style to claim responsibility for attacks. At this point, it is not clear who is responsible," the official added.
      Meanwhile, mortars fired at two U.S. bases in Iraq on Wednesday killed three American soldiers and wounded nine others, the military said Thursday.

      Associated Press writer Katherine Pfleger Shrader contributed to this report from Washington.


        World Fact Book  (CIA)]


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