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Suicide attack on Iraq police kills 15

Suicide attack on Iraq police kills 15

January 19, 2011 | 12:00 AM

Reuters/Baquba, Iraq

Iraqi security forces inspect damage near the site of a suicide bomb attack in Baquba yesterday

A suicide bomber driving an ambulance killed up to 15 people and wounded more than 50 in an attack yesterday on an Iraqi police training centre in volatile Diyala province, officials said.

Suspected Sunni insurgents and Shia militia have stepped up attacks in recent months on Iraqi policemen and soldiers, seeking to undermine faith in the security forces before a full US military withdrawal by the end of this year.

Samira al-Shibli, a spokeswoman for the provincial governor said 15 people were killed and 52 wounded in the blast in the city of Baquba, 65km northeast of Baghdad.

Police sources in Baquba put the death toll at 14, and 64 wounded. Ali Hussein, general manager of Diyala health department, said only five were killed, and 74 wounded.

One police source said there were two attackers. One of them shot dead three security guards at the gates of the training centre, opening the way for a second assailant to drive the ambulance in.

The blast caused part of the three-storey building, where offices for different departments of Iraqi police and security are located, to collapse, said Lieutenant Colonel Hisham al-Tamimi, head of the counter-terrorism department in Diyala.

"I can see hands and legs of dead policemen sticking out from under the rubble,” said a policeman at the blast site.

Yesterday’s attack was the second by a suicide bomber in two days on Iraqi security forces. At least 49 people were killed in former dictator Saddam Hussain’s hometown of Tikrit on Tuesday when a suicide bomber attacked a line of police recruits.

That was the bloodiest attack in Iraq since Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki won support in December for his reappointment, ending a nine-month stalemate that followed a March election.

Overall violence has fallen sharply since 2006-07 peak of the sectarian slaughter between once dominant Sunnis and majority Shias triggered after the 2003 US-led invasion.

But Sunni Islamist groups like Al Qaeda still battle Iraqi security forces, particularly in ethnically mixed Diyala, Baghdad and the turbulent northern province of Nineveh, and target the less visible US forces whenever they can.

Analysts said recent attacks are probably not related to the formation of the new Shia-led government, which includes the Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc.

Iraqiya won the most parliamentary seats in last year’s election and many feared its possible exclusion from power could have led to a surge in violence.

"Such explosions are common, due to the security breaches and the inability of the security apparatus to protect the people,” said Iraqi political analyst Abdul-Jabbar Ahmed, a professor at Baghdad University.

In a separate incident yesterday, a suicide car bomber killed two Shia pilgrims and wounded 16 on a road between Baquba and Baghdad, police sources said.

January 19, 2011 | 12:00 AM