Al-Qaida’s arm in Iraq has claimed responsibility for deadly raids on prisons on the outskirts of Baghdad this week that set free hundreds of prisoners, including some of its followers. …read more
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Al-Qaida’s arm in Iraq has claimed responsibility for deadly raids on prisons on the outskirts of Baghdad this week that set free hundreds of prisoners, including some of its followers. …read more
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Iraqi oil exports fell in June for the second month in a row as poor weather hit southern ports and saboteurs damaged a key pipeline, the oil ministry said Monday. …read more
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Iran has finalised a major contract to export gas to neighbouring Iraq, worth 3.7 billion dollars a year, local media on Monday quoted a deputy oil minister as saying. …read more
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Bombings against the Iraqi army in the country’s north killed 13 people on Monday, most of them soldiers, officers and doctors said. …read more
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By The Huffington Post News Editors
BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laded car into an army patrol in northern Iraq early Monday morning, killing at least 12 people, police and medical officials said.
The suicide bomber hit the patrol while traveling in a residential area in the city of Mosul, killing nine soldiers and three civilians, a police officer said. He added that 14 others, included four civilians, were wounded.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post
A suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laded car into an army patrol in northern Iraq early Monday morning, killing at least 12 people, police and medical officials said.
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Officials say a suicide attack against an army patrol in northern Iraq has killed 12 people. …read more
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Security forces foiled an attack by armed men on two prisons near Baghdad, the Iraqi interior ministry said, while online comments from jihadists on Monday claimed that thousands of prisoners had escaped. …read more
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Iraqi authorities say two morning bomb attacks on the outskirts of Baghdad have killed six, as the death toll from a wave of car bombings in the capital the night before jumped to 57. …read more
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Young Iraqis often spend evenings in cafes after fasting during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, but a string of bombings against the popular hangouts means doing so now carries deadly risk. …read more
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Interest by Citibank and Standard Chartered to expand into Iraq highlights the vast potential of the country’s banking sector, but the experience of a global rival points to the many pitfalls they must navigate. …read more
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Syrian Kurdish fighters in the north fought fierce battles against jihadists and captured a commander of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) late Saturday, a monitoring group said. …read more
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Iraqi officials: At least 30 dead in wave of evening car bombings in Baghdad commercial areas.
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A bombing and a shooting on Saturday killed eight people in Iraq, including the leader of a local Sunni militia opposed to al-Qaida, authorities said. …read more
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Romania’s president said Friday that Romanian authorities carried out “an unauthorized operation” abroad to capture a fugitive Syrian-Romanian businessman convicted of ordering the kidnapping of three Romanian journalists in Iraq.
Omar Hayssam, who was sentenced in absentia in 2007 to 20 years in prison, was handed over to Romania’s authorities early Friday and is now in police custody. The kidnapped journalists were freed after 55 days in captivity in 2005.
President Traian Basescu declined to reveal where Hayssam was captured or how he was brought back to Romania, but said: “How can I tell you when Romania carried out an unauthorized operation on the territory of another country?” He did not elaborate, but his comments suggested that Romanian authorities had carried out an unauthorized rendition on the 50-year-old.
Hayssam fled to Syria from Romania in 2006. His flight from Romania triggered resignations at a top level. The chiefs of the intelligence services and the general prosecutor were forced to resign amid allegations that they had facilitated his flight.
In an interview two years ago, Basescu said Romania knew exactly where Hayssam was. Hayssam had lived in Romania, where he obtained citizenship, for 24 years before fleeing.
A spokesman for Romania’s president earlier refused to say whether authorities in Damascus had turned Hayssam over.
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By avandagriff
A suicide bomb blast inside a Sunni mosque in central Iraq has killed at least 20 people and injured dozens more, officials say. Read More: BBC News – Iraq violence: Diyala mosque bomb attack ‘kills 20′.
The post Iraq violence: Diyala mosque bomb attack ‘kills 20′ appeared first on Endtime Ministries | End Of The Age | Irvin Baxter.
Source: Endtime Ministries
A bomb exploded inside a Sunni mosque in central Iraq during midday prayers Friday, killing at least 17 people in the latest outburst of deadly violence targeting worshippers during the holy month of Ramadan.
Suicide attacks, car bombings and other violence have killed nearly 200 people since the faithful began daytime fasting to mark the Islamic holy month, which started earlier in July.
The violence is an extension of a surge that has ripped through Iraq for months, reviving fears of a return to the widespread sectarian bloodshed that pushed the country to the brink of civil war after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
Diyala provincial councilman Sadiq al-Husseini said Friday’s explosion hit the Abu Bakir al-Sideeq mosque in the town of Wijaihiya, which is about 50 miles northeast of Baghdad. He said it killed at least 17.
Diyala province, where the attack occurred, was once the site of some of the fiercest fighting between U.S. forces and insurgents in Iraq. It remains a hotbed for terrorist attacks. The area is religiously mixed and witnessed some of the worst atrocities as Shiite militias battled Sunni insurgents for control in the years after the invasion.
“Terrorism is targeting all sects in Diyala mainly by attacking Sunni and Shiite mosques, funerals and football fields to draw the province into a sectarian conflict. All the victims were civilians,” al-Husseini said, appealing for calm. “I call on all Diyala residents to show self-restraint.”
Police and hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the information to media, confirmed the death toll. They also reported that more than 50 were wounded in the explosion, and warned that the number of dead could rise.
The attack struck while Iran’s outgoing president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, wrapped up a two-day trip to Iraq with visits to Shiite Muslim holy cities of Najaf and Karbala south of Baghdad. There was no indication the mosque blast was related to his trips.
Violence across Iraq has risen sharply since a heavy-handed crackdown by security forces on a Sunni protest camp in the northern town of Hawija on April 23. That raid followed months of rallies by Iraq’s minority Sunnis against the Shiite-led government over what they contend is second-class treatment and the unfair use of tough anti-terrorism measures against their sect.
The surge in bloodshed has left more than 2,800 people dead and many more wounded since the start of April.
Attacks on Sunni mosques, for years a relatively rare target in Iraq, have picked up significantly in recent months.
There has been no claim of responsibility for Friday’s bombing or many of the other recent attacks.
Sunni extremists such as al Qaeda’s Iraq arm that seek to undermine the Shiite-led government are frequently blamed for bombing attacks targeting civilians. They could be behind the Sunni mosque bombings too, hoping to incite a sectarian backlash against Shiites. So could Shiite militias that have been remobilizing following years of relative quiet.
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Officials say a bomb has exploded in a Sunni mosque in central Iraq, killing at least 10 people.
Provincial councilman Sadiq al-Huusseini says Friday’s explosion hit the Abu Bakir al-Sideeq mosque in the town of Wijaihiya, about 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad. He says it killed 10.
Police and hospital officials put the casualty toll at 12 dead and more than 40 wounded. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the information to media.
Iraq has been rocked by a surge of violence that has killed more than 2,800 people since the start of April, raising fears it is returning to the widespread sectarian bloodshed that pushed the country to the brink of civil war after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is in southern Iraq to visit two of the holiest cities for Shiite Muslims amid tight security on the second day of his two-day visit to the country.
The outgoing Iranian president waved to worshippers and smiled on Friday morning as he entered the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf, a city 160 kilometers (100 miles) south of Baghdad.
Security forces were deployed along the route from Najaf airport to the gold-domed shrine, one of the holiest sites in Shiite Islam.
Ahmadinejad’s convoy then plans to head to the city of Karbala, home to the shrine of Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad.
This is Ahmadinejad’s second visit to Iraq while in office. On Thursday, he met Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and other officials.
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The military’s highest court has denied a government request to reconsider the overturned murder conviction of a Marine who’s served more than half his 11-year sentence in one of the Iraq war’s biggest war crime cases.
The denial from the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces allows for the release of Sgt. Lawrence Hutchins III from the brig at a California Marine base.
Defense attorney Maj. Babu Kaza tells U-T San Diego that Hutchins will be released Friday.
The Navy can appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court or retry Hutchins.
Last month, the appeals court found Hutchins’ rights were violated when he was held in solitary confinement and interrogated without attorney access for seven days.
Hutchins led a squad accused of kidnapping an Iraqi man and killing him in 2006.
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