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August 06, 2007 Monday Rajab 21, 1428





US forces claims killing mastermind of bombs attacks on mosque


BAGHDAD, Aug 5: US forces killed the mastermind of two attacks on a revered Shia mosque at the heart of Iraq's bitter sectarian conflict during a crackdown on Al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate, the military said on Sunday.

But despite the announcement of the high-profile killing and wider operations to flush out Sunni extremists, 15 Iraqis were killed in a string of attacks in Baghdad and sectarian flashpoints to the south.

Haitham al-Badri, whom the US military linked to a string of lethal bombings and described as the Al Qaeda in Iraq “emir” in Salaheddin province, was killed in an air attack east of the northern city of Samarra last Thursday.

Close air support was scrambled after surveillance spotted a group of fighters apparently preparing an ambush, US military spokesman Rear Admiral Mark Fox told a news conference.

Helicopter straffing killed Badri, who was positively identified by close associates and family members, the spokesman said.

Fox said Badri was the believed mastermind behind a February 2006 attack on the Al-Askari mosque in Samarra, widely seen as the trigger of Iraq's sectarian strife, and another attack on June 13 that destroyed its two minarets.

The mosque was all but destroyed by the first bombing by Sunni extremists, which brought down its famed Golden Dome. It was hit again on June 13 this year in a follow-up bomb blast that brought down two minarets.

The first attack sparked Shiite reprisals that led to a bitter vendetta between rival sectarian factions which in turn led to Iraq's collapse into a generalised civil conflict that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.

Fox said Badri was also involved in a bomb attack in the northern city of Kirkuk in June 2006 that killed 20 Iraqis and an attack on an Iraqi Army checkpoint two months later in which 29 local security forces died.

The Iraqi authorities have also accused Badri of killing an Iraqi television journalist, Atwar Bahjat, who worked for Dubai's Al-Arabiya network, after she went to Samarra to cover the February shrine bombing.

She was kidnapped and murdered with her cameraman and soundman.

Badri is thought to have been linked to ousted dictator Saddam Hussein's former regime, which collapsed after the 2003 US-led invasion. He joined Ansar al-Sunna, a Sunni extremist militant group, and ultimately Al Qaeda.

Badri was killed during a US-backed Iraqi forces sweep of Samarra that was launched last week to expel Al-Qaeda's in country affiliate from the city, where it was accused of the two attacks on the shrine.

More than 80 suspects were arrested during the operation launched by more than 1,000 troops with support from US paratroopers since last Tuesday.

US forces said they killed four rebels and arrested seven people in further operations on Sunday targeting the same extremist network.

But in Baghdad, violence returned with the Sunday morning rush hour as mortar rounds slammed into cars queueing at a petrol station, killing 11 civilians and wounding more than a dozen, security officials and medics said.

In the pandemonium after the attack, another mortar shell crashed into a nearby house in the eastern neighbourhood of Al-Fudaylia.

The victims were transferred to at least three city hospitals, where medics at two casualty units confirmed 11 people died and 16 were wounded.—AFP






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