Two suicide bombings involving toxic chlorine gas made 350 people ill in Falluja, the US military said today, and another smaller bomb attack near Ramadi also released chlorine gas.
Hospital sources said earlier eight people were killed and dozens were became ill after chlorine gas was released in the two bombings in Falluja, in the western province of Anbar yesterday.
The attacks appeared to mark a stepped-up campaign by insurgents to use unconventional weapons, after two bombings involving chlorine killed eight people earlier this year.
The US military said they discovered an al Qaeda car bomb factory last month near Falluja that was constructing bombs with chlorine. The gas causes severe burns when breathed in and can cause death.
Friday's two bombs in Falluja occurred within the space of 40 minutes in the early evening and both involved suicide bombers driving dumper trucks.
In the first, near the town of Amiriya, two Iraqi police were killed and up to 100 Iraqis showed signs of chlorine exposure, with symptoms ranging from minor skin and lung irritation to vomiting, the US statement said.
Soon afterwards a suicide bomber detonated a dumper truck containing a 200-gallon (900-litre) chlorine tank rigged with explosives around 5 km south of Falluja.
"Coalition Forces responded to the attack and found approximately 250 local civilians suffering from symptoms related to chlorine exposure," the US statement said. "Of those affected by the attack, four adults and seven children were evacuated to Coalition medical facilities for further treatment," it said.
Earlier yesterday, another smaller bomb using chlorine detonated at a checkpoint northeast of Ramadi, wounding one US soldier and one Iraqi civilian.
"Suicide car bombers have used chlorine against Iraqis in Al Anbar a total of five times since January 28th," the statement said.