*****Baghdad mosque bomber disguised as beggar*****
· August 30, 2011 12:00AM
*****THE suicide bomber who killed 29 people at Baghdad's largest Sunni mosque disguised himself as an injured beggar and attended prayers there for nearly a week, a senior religious figure says.******
The attack hit Sunnis praying at a special service on Sunday night during Ramadan and appeared calculated to try to reignite widespread violence in Iraq just months before US troops are to complete their withdrawal.
*****The bomber, who pretended to be a beggar, had attended prayers for six straight days at the Um al-Qura mosque in western Baghdad, said Sheik Ahmed Abdul Gafur al-Samarraie, head of an endowment that oversees all Sunni religious sites nationwide.*****
He said the bomber had a bandaged hand and appeared to pose no threat.*****
"When his face became familiar to the guards they didn't search him last night," al-Samarraie said.*****
He said guards first became suspicious when they saw the man moving through the crowd trying to get close to al-Samarraie and took him outside.
But the man returned through a back door and blew himself up when he was a few steps away from al-Samarraie.
Under Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein, Iraq's Shi'ite majority was persecuted and repressed.
Shi'ites took power after his ouster, stoking Sunni resentment.
A 2006 attack on a Shi'ite shrine in the Sunni city of Samarra escalated widespread sectarian violence in Iraq and nearly ignited a nationwide civil war.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for Sunday's bombing, but suicide attacks generally are a hallmark of al-Qa'ida, which is dominated by Sunnis.
Intelligence officials have speculated that al-Qa'ida will do almost anything to spark new sectarian violence, but the group has been focusing on attacking Iraqi security forces and the Government to punish their alliance with Americans.
Al-Samarraie said he was confident the attack would not rupture the already uneasy peace across Iraq or stoke further violence in the way the 2006 Samarra bombing did.
"We will not turn back or retreat," he said, adding the best retaliation was "solidarity and unity".
Two security officials and medics at two hospitals put the casualty toll at 29, with 38 wounded.
Al-Samarraie said only six people died and 12 were wounded. Conflicting death tolls are common immediately after large-scale attacks in Iraq.
*****In a statement, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on Iraqis to stand strong against terrorists and "pursue them wherever they are".*****
"Solidarity and unity, and standing as one line behind the army and the police, are the only way to eliminate this danger, which does not differentiate between the Iraqis and targets all of us," al-Maliki said.*****
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· August 30, 2011 12:00AM
*****THE suicide bomber who killed 29 people at Baghdad's largest Sunni mosque disguised himself as an injured beggar and attended prayers there for nearly a week, a senior religious figure says.******
The attack hit Sunnis praying at a special service on Sunday night during Ramadan and appeared calculated to try to reignite widespread violence in Iraq just months before US troops are to complete their withdrawal.
*****The bomber, who pretended to be a beggar, had attended prayers for six straight days at the Um al-Qura mosque in western Baghdad, said Sheik Ahmed Abdul Gafur al-Samarraie, head of an endowment that oversees all Sunni religious sites nationwide.*****
He said the bomber had a bandaged hand and appeared to pose no threat.*****
"When his face became familiar to the guards they didn't search him last night," al-Samarraie said.*****
He said guards first became suspicious when they saw the man moving through the crowd trying to get close to al-Samarraie and took him outside.
But the man returned through a back door and blew himself up when he was a few steps away from al-Samarraie.
Under Sunni dictator Saddam Hussein, Iraq's Shi'ite majority was persecuted and repressed.
Shi'ites took power after his ouster, stoking Sunni resentment.
A 2006 attack on a Shi'ite shrine in the Sunni city of Samarra escalated widespread sectarian violence in Iraq and nearly ignited a nationwide civil war.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for Sunday's bombing, but suicide attacks generally are a hallmark of al-Qa'ida, which is dominated by Sunnis.
Intelligence officials have speculated that al-Qa'ida will do almost anything to spark new sectarian violence, but the group has been focusing on attacking Iraqi security forces and the Government to punish their alliance with Americans.
Al-Samarraie said he was confident the attack would not rupture the already uneasy peace across Iraq or stoke further violence in the way the 2006 Samarra bombing did.
"We will not turn back or retreat," he said, adding the best retaliation was "solidarity and unity".
Two security officials and medics at two hospitals put the casualty toll at 29, with 38 wounded.
Al-Samarraie said only six people died and 12 were wounded. Conflicting death tolls are common immediately after large-scale attacks in Iraq.
*****In a statement, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on Iraqis to stand strong against terrorists and "pursue them wherever they are".*****
"Solidarity and unity, and standing as one line behind the army and the police, are the only way to eliminate this danger, which does not differentiate between the Iraqis and targets all of us," al-Maliki said.*****
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