BAGHDAD, March 2: Iraqi police found the bodies of 14 policemen on Friday, and an Al Qaeda-linked group said it had killed them to avenge the alleged rape of a `Sunni woman’ last month.

Police said the bodies were discovered close to Baquba, the provincial capital of Diyala province, not far from where the men disappeared on Thursday.

A group called the Islamic State in Iraq said in an Internet statement it had kidnapped 18 men working for the interior ministry following `the rape of our sister ... Sabreen Janabi’.

The group later said it had killed them all after the government ignored demands it made for their release.

Janabi has said she was raped by officials from the police force.

In Baghdad, where US and Iraqi troops are engaged in a major security crackdown, police said a car bomb killed 10 people and wounded 17 when it ripped through a used car market in Sadr City, a stronghold of the Mehdi Army militia.

Iraqi and US military officials said troops would soon launch operations to seize weapons and hunt militants in Sadr City, signalling their resolve to press ahead with the last-ditch security plan even in sensitive areas.

The Mehdi Army is headed by radical cleric Moqtada al Sadr, a key backer of Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki.

SECTARIAN DIVISIONS: Diyala, north of Baghdad, is home to Shias, Sunnis and Kurds and has been the scene of relentless bloodshed.

A police source in Diyala said 14 men, including a high-ranking official, left their base in Baquba around 11amon Thursday to return to their homes in the area of Saadiyet al Shat, north of the city, but failed to arrive.

The first Internet statement of the Islamic State in Iraq group included photographs of 18 men, some in uniform and some in civilian clothing, blindfolded in a room.

The Islamic State in Iraq demanded the government hand over the officials behind the rape and release all `Sunni women in interior ministry jails’ within 24 hours or it would carry out `God's verdict’ on the detainees.

“The Islamic State in Iraq has given the infidel government of (Nuri) al-Maliki 24 hours to respond to its demands ... but it (the government) did not give any importance for their blood,” the group said in a later statement announcing the men had been killed.

The group includes Al Qaeda and several smaller militant groups. The authenticity of the statement could not be verified.

A major Sunni political party has said the woman was Shia, not Sunni, and that Janabi was a false name.—Reuters

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