Rare twin suicide attack kills at least 28 in Baghdad
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[January 21, 2021]
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Islamic State
militants could have launched a twin suicide bombing that killed at
least 28 people in a Baghdad market on Thursday, the first such attack
in years, Iraq's civil defence chief said.
The Iraqi military said two attackers wearing explosive vests had blown
themselves up among shoppers at a crowded market in Tayaran Square in
central Baghdad. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
"Daesh terrorist groups might be standing behind the attacks," Civil
Defence chief Major General Kadhim Salman told reporters, using an
Arabic acronym for Islamic State.
The hardline Sunni Muslim group captured vast areas of Iraq and imposed
its own rule before being defeated in 2017 by Iraqi forces backed with
U.S. air power.
Speaking at the scene of the bombings, Salman said the death toll had
risen to 28 from 23 initially reported, with 73 more people wounded.
Police sources said Iraqi security forces had been deployed and key
roads blocked to prevent possible further attacks.
Suicide bombings were once common in Baghdad but have been rare in the
Iraqi capital since Islamic State was driven out. The last deadly
suicide blast in the city, also at Tayaran Square, killed at least 27
people in January 2018.
Reuters cameramen saw pools of blood at the scene shortly after the
blast.
"The attacker was standing in the middle of a crowd and pretended to be
sick, and then blew himself up and tore people to pieces," said a street
vendor who had been standing nearby.
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Members of Iraqi security forces keep guard at the site of a twin
suicide bombing attack in a central market in Baghdad, Iraq January
21, 2021. REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani
A video taken from a rooftop and circulated on social media
purported to show the second blast scattering people gathered in the
area. Images shared online showed several people apparently dead or
wounded.
Reuters could not independently verify those images.
Militants from Islamic State remain in Iraq, waging an insurgency
against Iraqi forces and attacking local officials in northern
areas. Government and military officials do not now consider the
group able to take over significant territory but say it will
continue to wage attacks that threaten Iraq's stability and
security.
Iraqi forces continue to fight remaining Islamic State militants and
are working to secure the border with Syria across which the group
has often moved personnel.
(Reporting by Baghdad newsroom; Writing by Ahmed Rasheed and John
Davison; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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