Al-Zarqawi not believed to be among Mosul dead

IRAQ: A suicide car bomb blast killed 18 people, including 10 police, in the northern city of Kirkuk yesterday, and mortars …

IRAQ: A suicide car bomb blast killed 18 people, including 10 police, in the northern city of Kirkuk yesterday, and mortars landed near the US ambassador to Iraq during a ceremony in Saddam Hussein's home town of Tikrit.

The bomber detonated his explosives-laden car next to a group of police vehicles on the main road leading south from Kirkuk to Baghdad shortly after sunset. Police colonel Borhan Tayyib Taha said 28 people were wounded in the blast.

Ambulances ferried the worst cases to hospitals in Kirkuk, where distraught relatives gathered to search for loved ones.

Kirkuk is a mixed Arab, Kurdish and Turkmen city that has seen frequent episodes of violence, some the result of tensions between the communities, all of whom claim ownership of the city close to vast oil reserves.

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The blast follows a string of suicide bombs across the country in the past five days in the build-up to elections set for December 15th. At least 180 people have been killed since Friday, including 77 Shia Muslims blown up in twin suicide bombings on mosques in the mixed Kurdish and Shia city of Khanaqin.

Yesterday's attack came hours after insurgents fired two mortars at a complex of palaces built by Saddam in Tikrit, where US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad was attending a ceremony handing the palaces back to the Iraqi government.

No one was injured by those blasts, which the US military said failed to detonate properly. Gen George Casey, the top US commander in Iraq, was also attending the ceremony.

"This is a phenomenon existing in the country, we are used to it," Mr Khalilzad told reporters after security guards had rushed him to a safer place and then brought him back.

Violence has been on the increase in the run-up to the polls and tensions between Iraq's majority Shia Muslim community and the minority Sunni Arabs have also soared.

Political analysts say the discovery 10 days ago of a secret detention facility run by the Shia-led interior ministry and mainly housing Sunni Arab prisoners who were beaten and ill-fed has ratcheted up tensions on all sides.

The US military and Iraqi security forces have stepped up operations around the country, but particularly in the lawless western province of Anbar.

On Saturday, US and Iraqi forces surrounded a house in the northern city of Mosul and engaged militants in a firefight before some of those inside blew themselves up. Iraqi authorities said they believed the eight killed inside were senior militant leaders, but the US military yesterday quashed speculation that Jordanian militant ringleader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi may have been among them.

"I have absolutely no reason to believe that he was one of those that were killed," US Gen John Vines, the No 2 US commander in Iraq, said, speaking to Pentagon reporters via teleconference from Iraq.

Al-Zarqawi, whose al-Qaeda in Iraq group claimed responsibility for the hotel bombings in Amman in Jordan earlier this month that killed 60 people, has masterminded some of the deadliest attacks in Iraq over the past two years. - (Reuters)