A female suicide bomber blew herself up in Iraq today among police officers who were celebrating the release of a comrade from US custody, killing at least 22 people.
Separate bombings in Iraq killed another 13 people.
The suicide attack happened in Diyala, a province north-east of Baghdad where Sunni insurgents have carried out persistent attacks despite security gains elsewhere in the country. The bomber targeted the home of a police commissioner who had been detained by American troops for allegedly cooperating with the Mahdi Army, a Shia militia.
Maj Gen Abdul-Karim al-Rubaie, the military commander in Diyala, said most of the 22 fatalities were police and that 33 people were wounded in the evening attack in Balad Ruz, 45 miles north-east of Baghdad.
Mr Al-Rubaie said police had gathered to celebrate Iftar, the meal that breaks the sunrise-to-sunset fast during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, with Adnan Shukr al-Timimi, a police commissioner who was held at US-run Camp Bucca, a detention centre in southern Iraq. Mr Al-Timimi, who had invited friends and relatives to a banquet, and his parents and two children were among the dead, a hospital official said.
The attacker was a woman, Mr al-Rubaie said. Insurgents are increasingly turning to women to launch suicide attacks because they can conceal explosives more easily under long garments and evade searches by male security guards, and possibly because the male pool of suicide recruits is smaller than in the early days of the war.
In a similar attack on August 24, a suicide bomber blew himself up at a celebration to welcome home an Iraqi detainee released from US custody, killing at least 25 people. The attack occurred inside one of several tents set up outside a house in the Abu Ghraib area on Baghdad’s western outskirts, according to residents and police.
The US military said today that it had released a total of 1,167 detainees in Iraq in the first two weeks of Ramadan, and that projections for releases in the third week “are more ambitious and assume no delays or unexpected interruptions to the release process”.
In a statement, the military said there were about 18,900 detainees in detention, down from a high of 26,000 in November 2007.
In Baghdad, a double car bombing struck a busy commercial district, killing 13 people in one of the deadliest attacks in the capital in weeks. Iraqi officials said the explosives-laden cars were parked between a passport office and a courthouse when they blew up almost simultaneously in the mainly Shia neighbourhood of Karradah.
Encouraged by security gains, authorities several months ago lifted a ban on parking vehicles in the area that had been imposed to prevent such attacks, although the buildings remained surrounded by concrete walls for protection.
Police and an interior ministry official said the dead were civilians. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorised to release the information, said 35 people were wounded and dozens of cars were burned or damaged in the attack.
The US military blamed the Baghdad attacks on al Qaeda in Iraq, which has been severely weakened by military campaigns but retains the ability to carry out devastating strikes. Lt Gen Lloyd Austin, the No 2 American commander in Iraq, said key measures of insurgent violence today are about 80% lower than one year ago but cautioned that it would be a mistake to push the US-trained Iraqi army and police into a leading security role before they are ready.
The attacks came as US Defence Secretary Robert Gates arrived in Baghdad to meet Iraqi officials and preside over tomorrow’s handover ceremony to mark the transition of command of US forces in Iraq.
AP