Leaders appeal for calm after Baghdad carnage

IRAQ: A barrage of car bombs and mortar rounds aimed at three street markets in Sadr City, Baghdad's biggest Shia district, …

IRAQ:A barrage of car bombs and mortar rounds aimed at three street markets in Sadr City, Baghdad's biggest Shia district, brought carnage to one of the most densely populated suburbs of Iraq's capital yesterday and the heaviest loss of life on a single day in the country's sectarian war.

At least 157 people were killed when about five cars packed with explosives were detonated in rapid succession.

The authorities imposed an immediate curfew throughout the capital to prevent revenge attacks, and late last night closed the international airport. Leaders of Iraq's three main communities stood shoulder to shoulder on national television appealing for calm. President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, was grim-faced as he and his Sunni and Shia vice-presidents asked people to show unity and self-restraint.

The co-ordinated car bombs, along with mortar rounds, hit shoppers at pavement stalls in the district, which is home to more than two million people. More than 250 people were injured.

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Angry and distraught residents and Shia militiamen poured into the streets, swearing at Sunnis and firing weapons into the air. Ambulances rushed to burning stalls to treat the wounded, while rescue workers removed charred bodies from cars and minibuses and took them away on wheeled carts. Iraqi TV showed appalling pictures of bloodied children lying in hospital corridors, and streets in Sadr City littered with body parts.

Shortly after the bombings, in apparent retaliation, 10 mortar rounds were fired at Baghdad's main Sunni mosque, the Abu Hanifa mosque in Adhimiya, a Sunni enclave in Shia east Baghdad. They killed one person and wounded 14 others. Eight mortar rounds were also fired at the headquarters of the Association of Muslim Scholars, the country's leading Sunni organisation, which has close contacts with anti-occupation insurgents.

The horrendous slaughter of civilians - with a toll surpassing the notorious bombing in Hilla in 2004, which left 125 dead - came on a day that had already seen one of the most brazen assaults since the US invasion in March 2003.

A group of about 30 attacked Iraq's health ministry in Baghdad at midday, firing mortars and machine guns and forcing hundreds of staff to take cover for up to three hours.

Some gunmen surrounded the ministry compound while others appeared on nearby roofs. Security guards firing rifles managed to block them from getting inside. US helicopters and Iraqi armoured vehicles arrived, and the gunmen withdrew. No fatalities were immediately reported.

"Terrorists are attacking the building with mortars and machine guns and we can even see snipers. Any employee who leaves the building will be killed," a deputy health minister, Hakim al-Zamily, said in a phone call from his office. It was Mr Zamily's second brush with death within four days. On Monday he survived an assassination attempt when gunmen attacked his convoy and killed two of his bodyguards. Another Shia deputy health minister was abducted on Sunday and has not been seen since.

The health minister, Ali al-Shemari, is a follower of the radical Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who has 30 MPs in Iraq's parliament, one of the largest single blocks.

Sadrist militiamen are blamed by Sunnis for many of the daily murders and abductions of Sunni civilians in Baghdad. Last week an unidentified group of gunmen attacked the ministry of higher education, which is run by a Sunni. They abducted between 50 and 150 staff. Some were tortured and killed, some released and a number are still missing.

Yesterday's bombings and the ministry raid may well have been carried out by Sunni gunmen seeking revenge. Whether Mr Sadr controls all the gunmen who act in his name is far from clear. Many militias appear to act independently as local vigilantes, small-time warlords, gang-leaders and criminal racketeers. - (Guardian service)