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Life and times of a writer and (sometimes) photographer

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

This world red hot




The irony of someone yelling that there was suicide bomber in crowd of pilgrims heading to the Kadhimiya mosque in northern Baghdad and that resulting in a stampede killing 648 people. That this did more damage then a suicide bomber could ever is where the irony lays.

from CNN: 648 dead in Baghdad stampede
322 hurt as bridge railing collapses amid panic near mosque

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- At least 648 people were killed and 322 others injured in a stampede on a Baghdad bridge after a massive Shiite religious commemoration erupted into panic Wednesday.

Most of those killed were women and children, police sources said.

Witnesses said the stampede started after someone screamed that a suicide bomber was in the crowd of pilgrims heading to the Kadhimiya mosque in northern Baghdad.

A railing on the bridge then collapsed under the crush of people, and hundreds fell to their deaths in the Tigris River about 30 meters (yards) below, CNN's Jennifer Eccleston reported.

According to police, some people were crushed to death but most drowned. Emergency crews rushed the wounded to five hospitals as relatives at the riverbank searched for their kin.

The stampede occurred at about 11:30 a.m. (3:30 a.m. EDT) near the mosque, where pilgrims were gathered to commemorate the martyrdom of Imam Moussa al-Khadhem, a prominent figure in Shiite history.

He is buried at the Kadhimiya mosque, the largest Shiite mosque in the capital.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari announced a three-day mourning period, and President Jalal Talabani said the stampede "will leave a scar in our souls and will be remembered with those who died in the result of terror acts."

The incident took place three hours after a mortar attack near the same mosque killed seven people and wounded 36 others, police said.

The U.S. military said helicopter crews saw insurgents "firing rockets and mortars that landed near a mosque," causing "several impacts" on the mosque.

The helicopter crews took aim at the insurgents, and coalition ground units raced to the area and searched for those responsible for the attack.

"At the suspected point of origin, coalition forces discovered evidence of a tube used for launching rockets," the military said, adding that more than a dozen people were detained for questioning.

The attack didn't stop pilgrims from continuing their rituals, marked in part by self-flagellation and chest-thumping in their walk to the shrine in the hours before the stampede.
Air strikes kill 7 militants

On Tuesday, the U.S. Marines told CNN that air strikes flattened insurgent safe houses used by militants linked to al Qaeda in western Iraq.

The air attacks near the Syrian border killed at least seven militants, the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force said.

A top operative called Abu Islam was among the dead, the force said.

Police in Baghdad reported that 56 civilians were killed in the strikes.

They said police contacts in the region told them 40 civilians died in one house and 16 in another. Two children survived, they added.

A U.S. military spokesman said he had no specifics yet on the strike.

Lt. Col. Steve Boylan of the Coalition Press Information Center said: "We target only military targets and take precautions on any type of civilian casualties on all of our operations."

CNN could not independently verify the report of civilian deaths.

The three air strikes were ordered on Husayba and Karabila, near Qaim, after tips were received, officials told CNN.

Four 500-pound bombs were dropped on a house outside Husayba in the first raid at 6:20 a.m. (10:20 p.m. Monday ET), a statement said.

Two more bombs were later dropped on a house the Marines said was occupied by Abu Islam.

In the third attack, two bombs were aimed at a house in Karabila where militants sought refuge after the first strike, the statement said.

The attacks were the latest combat in continued hostilities reported in the border region.

On Friday, Marine planes pounded a suspected safe house in Husayba where about 50 insurgents were said to be staying, the day after three U.S. soldiers died in a roadside bombing in the town.
U.S. pilot killed

A U.S. pilot was killed and a second was wounded when a U.S. helicopter was hit by small-arms fire in northern Iraq, a military spokesman said.

The attack on the UH-58 Kiowa Warrior helicopter came while it was flying over Tal Afar.

The aircraft went down, but the wounded pilot was able to get the helicopter airborne again and left the immediate area.

The number of U.S. troops killed in the Iraq war stands at 1,878.

Violence continues in Iraq as politicians try to move forward with the constitutional process.

In separate incidents Monday, gunmen assassinated the brother of the former governor of Baghdad and an official assigned to the Iraqi Elections Commission. (Full story)

The killings came a day after Iraq's constitutional committee approved a final draft of the Iraqi constitution and put it before the National Assembly, despite the rejection of Sunni Arab leaders. (Full story)

It will go to the Iraqi people, who will vote by October 15.

CNN's Jennifer Eccleston, Kianne Sadeq, Cal Perry, Enes Dulami and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this story.

Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.

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