Suicide blasts kill 67 in Iraq as violence escalates

Iraq: Suicide bombers killed at least 67 Iraqis yesterday in escalating violence that has cast doubts over the new government…

Iraq: Suicide bombers killed at least 67 Iraqis yesterday in escalating violence that has cast doubts over the new government's ability to defeat insurgents.

Guerrilla bombings and other attacks have killed more than 250 people since the cabinet was announced eight days ago, in one of the bloodiest weeks of the insurgency.

In the deadliest blast yesterday, a suicide car bomber struck a vegetable market in a southern Iraqi town, killing at least 58 people and wounding 44, police and hospital officials said.

The attack hit the mostly Shia town of Suwayra, reinforcing fears that guerrilla violence will fuel growing sectarian tensions and ignite a civil war.

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Guerrillas also exerted pressure on US allies in Iraq. In a new video aired on Al Jazeera, kidnappers of an Australian man demanded Australia begin withdrawing troops from Iraq within 72 hours. The shaven-headed hostage was shown held at gunpoint.

In Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, a suicide car bomber blew up his vehicle beside a minibus carrying policemen, killing at least nine and wounding several, local police said.

A series of bomb blasts and ambushes in Baghdad killed at least 24 people on Thursday. The previous day, a suicide bomb in the northern town of Arbil killed as many as 60 people, and a car bomb in Baghdad killed nine Iraqi soldiers.

Iraqi officials often blame such attacks on the elusive al-Qaeda leader in Iraq, Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, whose group claimed the Tikrit bombing near a checkpoint set up by Iraqi security forces.

"A lion from the martyrs' brigade attacked a group of the apostate police, who are agents of America, in the city of Tikrit ... killing many, " said a statement from Al-Qaeda Organisation for Holy War in Iraq on an Islamist website.

In Baghdad, a resident alerted police after he saw bodies being buried. Police found the corpses of 14 men. Some of the victims, blindfolded and wearing civilian clothes and left in a garbage dump, had been shot in the head, police said on Friday.

As it tries to prevent insurgent attacks and ambushes, Iraq's new government must also try to tackle a series of kidnappings of foreigners, many of whom have been killed.

The Australian hostage, Douglas Wood (63) was shown on Al Jazeera apparently pleading for his life as two masked insurgents pointed their guns at him. His head had been shaved and he appeared to have bruising around his right eye.

Australia insists it does not negotiate with hostage takers. Last year, Canberra criticised the Philippines for withdrawing troops from Iraq to save the life of a Filipino truck driver held by Zarqawi's group.

Al Jazeera also said a group had kidnapped six Jordanians working in Iraq to press Jordanian companies not to work with US forces. It aired a video tape showing six men holding up their passports as they sat beneath a sign carrying the name of the group, Al-Bara bin Malek Brigades.

As Iraq's new leaders try to contain the insurgency, they are struggling to resolve their own political disputes.

After the January 30th elections, Sunni Arabs who dominated under Saddam were sidelined and the Shias and Kurds became the new powers in Iraq.

Their leaders have promised to give Sunni Arabs a prominent role in politics, but sectarian tensions and haggling have dragged on since the partial cabinet was announced. Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, an Islamist Shia, has yet to name ministers for key portfolios such as defence and oil.

New tensions also erupted yesterday between Iraqi security forces and supporters of radical Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Followers of Sadr clashed with Iraqi soldiers after Friday prayers in Kufa, near the holy city of Najaf, and hours later gunmen killed two Sadr supporters in Baghdad, police said.

Sadr, who has led two major uprisings against US troops in Iraq, has been keeping a low profile since an American military offensive against his Medhi Army fighters in Najaf last August.

If he decides to stir up his militiamen again, the new government could face trouble on a new front. -