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Fresh bombs shake Iraqi capital | Fresh bombs shake Iraqi capital |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A series of suicide car bombings and roadside blasts in Baghdad has killed about 15 people, including members of the police and security services. | |
In the worst attack a car bomb exploded at a petrol station used by Iraqi police killing at least five people. | |
About 15 people were wounded in the blast, which also damaged 20 police and civilian cars waiting to refuel. | About 15 people were wounded in the blast, which also damaged 20 police and civilian cars waiting to refuel. |
The attacks came hours before the US was due to hand formal control of the Iraqi army to Iraq's prime minister. | |
A US military spokesman called it one of the most significant steps in handing power back to Iraqis since the formation of the first democratically elected government in the post-Saddam era. | |
Spate of attacks | |
In one of the attacks, insurgents killed three civilians and wounded 20 more in a roadside bombing near the Sunni al-Nida mosque, in a largely Shia area of north-east Baghdad, security officials said. | |
Schoolgirl Marwa Faris lost her father in one attackThe bomb exploded as a police patrol was passing the area, officials said, and several security force members were injured. | |
In the western Mansour district, a roadside bomb killed a man as he was driving his daughter to school for an exam. Fifteen-year-old Marwa Faris and a passer-by were also injured. | |
A suicide car bomb also exploded near a road tunnel in the centre of Baghdad, killing two civilians and two police special forces officers, and wounding 13 people. | |
A roadside bomb also targeted a police patrol in the central Karrada district, killing a civilian and wounding two others. | |
Meanwhile, Iraqi TV reported that a nephew of Iraqi parliament speaker Mahmoud al-Mashhadani had been kidnapped. Gunmen snatched Ahmed al-Mashhadani on Wednesday night in northern Baghdad, al-Sharqiya TV reported. | |
Uncertain timetable | |
The handover ceremony putting Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki in direct control of the military is five days later than scheduled, although the delay has not been explained. | |
The first units to be transferred are Iraq's small navy and air force, and the 8th Army Division stationed in Najaf. | |
But correspondents say it is unclear how fast the complete transfer of security control can be achieved. | |
"It's the prime minister's decision how rapidly he wants to move along with assuming control," said US spokesman Maj Gen William Caldwell on Wednesday. | |
"They can move as rapidly thereafter as they want. I know, conceptually, they've talked about perhaps two divisions a month," Maj Gen Caldwell said. | |
US-led forces disbanded what was left of the Iraqi army after they overthrew Saddam Hussein's rule in 2003. | |
Since then, the coalition has been training and equipping new Iraqi forces with a view to their taking over security and allowing the eventual withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq. |