27 killed by two car bombs in Baghdad

BAGHDAD/ERBIL - At least 27 people were killed by two car bombs in the Iraqi capital on Friday, police and medical sources said.
One of the blasts happened in a market in the southwestern Hay al-Amel neighbourhood and the other in the eastern district of al-Habibiya, the sources said. Moreover, a car bomb killed three people on Friday outside the U.S. consulate in Erbil, the capital of Iraq's Kurdistan region that is allied with Washington in a war against Islamic State, which claimed the attack.
No U.S. personnel were hurt in the blast, according to the State Department which said a ‘vehicle-borne improvised explosive device’ exploded right outside the entrance to the heavily fortified compound. Kurdistan is an important partner for the U.S.-led coalition in its campaign to ‘degrade and destroy’ the Islamic State group that overran large parts of Iraq last summer and threatened to reach Erbil.
A Reuters witness heard the blast, which was followed by gunfire and sent a column of black smoke high above the Ankawa district, a predominantly Christian neighbourhood packed with cafes popular with foreigners. ‘It seems the consulate was the target,’ Nihad Qoja, the mayor of Erbil's city centre, told Reuters.
The head of security for Ankawa said three people were killed and 14 wounded. ‘They (Islamic State) want to show they are present,’ Sherzad Farmand said. Islamic State also claimed responsibility for two car bombings in the Baghdad that killed at least 27 people on Friday. ‘The fighters of the Islamic State detonated two car bombs in the heart of the Iraqi capital this evening and a third in Erbil,’ the group said via its news agency.
Such attacks are relatively rare in Kurdistan, which has managed to insulate itself from the worst of the violence afflicting the rest of Iraq.
The last major attack in Erbil, also claimed by Islamic State, was in November, when a suicide car bomber blew himself up outside the governor's office, killing five.

ePaper - Nawaiwaqt