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Iraq
Protests as Baghdad bombing death toll rises to 186 or 292
2016-07-08
[ENGLISH.ALARABIYA.NET] Anger and protests mounted Thursday at the site of a massive truck bombing by ISIS earlier this week in Baghdad that killed scores as the corpse count rose further, with more remains recovered from the rubble.

The attack - the deadliest attack in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion - has stoked public unrest and spurred Iraqi officials to announce a number of new security measures.

Iraqi hospital and police officials said Thursday that their corpse count from Sundays attack now stood at 186, with around 20 people still missing. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they are not authorized to talk to the media.

However,
a clean conscience makes a soft pillow...
Ahmad Roudaini, from the Health Ministry’s media office, said the ministry’s corpse count is 292.

The discrepancies in the numbers could not immediately be reconciled. Many of those killed have had to be identified with DNA-testing because their bodies were burned beyond recognition.

On Thursday evening, a crowd of angry friends and family members of the victims tried to push into one of the buildings hit in the truck bombing but civilian volunteers held them back.

The ISIS jacket wallah had detonated his explosives in Baghdad’s central Karada neighborhood, outside a shopping mall in a street crammed with people preparing for the Moslem holiday of Eid al-Fitr. The area, packed with shops, cafes and restaurants, had swelled overnight with Baghdad residents eager from a respite from the daily fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.

Mustafa Hassan, one of the men gathered at the scene on Thursday, said he had volunteered to help sift through the debris after authorities failed to do so. Hassan, a young man wearing a surgical mask and gloves, held up two plastic bags that he believed contained charred human flesh.

Roudaini said the ministry of health continues to help transport the remains of the dead to Baghdad’s forensic lab or to the city morgue, but he said the scale of the kaboom has overwhelmed the teams who normally respond to such attacks.

"Till now there are maybe still some dead under the building, we don’t know," Roudaini said.

But Hassan, who said he had been coming every day to the site of the attack, insisted that only firefighters were seen at the site, no one else. As he spoke to news hounds, a man behind him pushed past an improvised barrier and ran into the burned-out building.

"He’s looking for his wife, she’s still missing, he wants to find anything, even just an earring," Hassan said.

Moments later, the man was carried out of the building by a group of volunteers. Hassan said he likely had fainted from grief. "It happens a lot here," he added.

Hundreds gathered in the street chanted religious slogans and waved Iraqi and Shiite militia flags. Hours after the bombing, ISIS said it had targeted Shiites, whom the Lion of Islam Sunni group considers as apostates. Many of the Karada victims were Shiites, but many Sunnis and Christians were also among the dead.

Others gathered in Karada on Thursday also blamed the government for failing to secure the city.

"People are getting more and more angry," said Hussein Samir, 24. "Every day that people have to think about this tragedy, it just makes them more upset."

After the attack, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced new measures, including that much-disputed bomb-detection wands would no longer be used by security forces. Experts have repeatedly pronounced the wands bogus.

Al-Abadi also said aerial scanning measures would be stepped-up to improve intelligence gathering in Baghdad and that the ring of checkpoints around the capital would be tightened. It is unclear if any of those measures have yet been implemented.

At the site of the blast, hundreds of death notices have been plastered over what’s left of burned-out buildings on either side of a once bustling thoroughfare.

Muhammad Mehdi, an arts school student, said he hopes the buildings are kept as they are. "If they just wash this away and rebuild, we will forget about what happened here. We’ll never learn our lesson," he said.

Posted by:Fred

#1  "We’ll never learn our lesson"

You're Arabs. Q.E.D.
Posted by: Pappy   2016-07-08 20:02  

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