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2005-01-30 Iraq-Jordan
Suicide car bombing near Baghdad polling site, bomber and Iraqi cop killed
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Posted by Dan Darling 2005-01-30 12:34:03 AM|| || Front Page|| [7 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1  Update from MSNBC:

Iraqis voted Sunday in their country’s first free election in a half-century, as insurgents made good on threats of violence with bombs and mortar attacks in at least three cities. Two Iraqi soldiers and two civilians were also wounded in the attack near the Zahraa school, used as a voting center.

More than a dozen loud blasts, believed to be mortar fire, echoed across the city shortly afterwards.

Mortar fire and explosions were also heard in the religiously mixed city of Baqouba 30 miles northeast of the capital and in Basra in southern Iraq.

MSNBC-TV's David Shuster confirmed reports of the Baghdad blasts. "In addition to what sounded like explosions, there was also the rattle of gunfire," Shuster said.

There were no signs of voting in the Sunni Muslim stronghold cities — and rebel centers — of Fallujah and Ramadi, west of Baghdad. Sunni extremists, fearing victory by the Shiites, have called for a boycott, claiming no vote held under U.S. military occupation is legitimate.

There were no immediate reports of violence at the polls, but an explosion was heard at the U.S. military base in Kirkuk in the north. Scattered small arms fire was heard near another U.S. base near Baghdad’s airport.

“So far the situation is excellent in all areas,” said the chairman of Iraq’s electoral commission, Abdul-Hussein Hendawi. “All the polling centers, their doors are open. So far we haven’t heard about any problems.”
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 1:22:02 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 1:22:02 AM|| Front Page Top

#2  And from Rooters:

In Samarra, the crackle of gunfire was heard across the city minutes after polls opened. A roadside bomb exploded near a U.S. patrol but there were no reports of casualties. An F-15 fighter jet roared over the town, which was shrouded in a chilly mist.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 1:29:00 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 1:29:00 AM|| Front Page Top

#3  And from the AP:

Heavy explosions and a series of mortar attacks broke out across Baghdad, and in several other cities, including Baquoba, Basra and Mosul, less than two hours after voting began.

Two mortars hit near the Ministry of Interior on the city's eastern edge, one witness said. And there were gunfire exchanges in the New Baghdad area in the eastern part of the city.

Fighting raged late Saturday in the ethnically mixed northern city of Kirkuk between police and insurgents. The clashes occurred in a predominantly Sunni Arab neighborhood and lasted for about an hour, according to police Brig. Gen. Torhan Abdul-Rahman Youssef.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 1:37:29 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 1:37:29 AM|| Front Page Top

#4  Rooters again:

Despite extraordinary security measures, several explosions echoed across Baghdad and there were multiple blasts in Mosul and Baquba. Police said a blast hit a polling station in the southern city of Basra but there was no word on casualties. A mortar attack also killed one Iraqi near Hilla, south of the capital.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 1:52:42 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 1:52:42 AM|| Front Page Top

#5 Hi Dan. Thx for the updates...
Posted by Seafarious  2005-01-30 1:55:37 AM||   2005-01-30 1:55:37 AM|| Front Page Top

#6  No problem Emily, I plan on being up awhile tonight.

Here's the latest from AP:

In restive Mosul in the north, American troops and Iraqi soldiers roamed the streets, using loudspeakers to announce the locations of polling sites and urging people to vote. But streets were deserted.

In the heavily Sunni town of Mahmoudiya in the so-called "triangle of death" south of Baghdad, the only cars on the streets were ambulances.

The suicide attack in western Baghdad claimed the life of one policeman and wounded several other people, while mortar attacks in Khan al-Mahawil, 40 miles south of Baghdad, killed another policeman at a polling station.

Witnesses said three other people were wounded when a rocket or mortar landed near a polling station in Sadr City, the heart of Baghdad's Shiite Muslim community.

Voters nationwide began trickling past police guards and heavy security into schools and other buildings converted into polling centers. About 300,000 Iraqi and American troops are on the streets and on standby to protect voters.

"I don't have a job. I hope the new government will give me a job," said one voter, Rashi Ayash, 50, a former lieutenant colonel in the Iraqi force. "I voted for the rule of law."

"God willing, the elections will be good ... Today's voting is very important," said the head of the main Shiite cleric-endorsed ticket, Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim.

Under the eye of sharpshooters looking down from nearby rooftops, the three were searched first at an outer perimeter about 40 yards from the school, then they had to remove their jackets and take batteries from their cell phones before walking through coils of barbed wire.

Overhead, helicopters clattered and a jet fighter roared by. Occasional bursts of machine gun fire echoed through Baghdad's deserted streets.

Voting was brisk as expected in Kurdish-ruled areas of northern Iraq, where voters were also choosing a regional parliament.

"I can't read or write so I ticked the number" of the Kurdish ticket, said Fouad Fattah, 29, a policeman in Irbil. "I was afraid to make a mistake. I hope the Kurds get a great number of votes so that we can rule ourselves."

In Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, only seven people showed up in the first two hours of voting at a school in the city center, while in the diverse city of Baquoba, jubilant voters danced and clapped outside a polling station.

In the northern city of Kirkuk, buses hired by city officials picked up people walking toward voting centers to get them there more quickly.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 2:13:49 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 2:13:49 AM|| Front Page Top

#7 http://www.theadventuresofchester.com/ also liveblogging...
Posted by Seafarious  2005-01-30 2:16:27 AM||   2005-01-30 2:16:27 AM|| Front Page Top

#8  Here's a pretty good sign:

Despite the attacks, there was brisk turnout in the poor Shiite community of Jisr Diyala in eastern Baghdad, with the number of voters increasing as the morning wore on.

A spokesman for Iraq's elections commission said nearly all the 5,200 polling stations nationwide opened on schedule.


My guess is that turn-out is likely to increase as the day goes on, since most people were wary about going to the polls for fear of becoming Zarqawi's latest victims. In many ways, he may well be a victim of his own hype - he's put so much into bringing down these elections that unless he can mount some major operations across Iraq he is going to lose a lot of the fear that he's enjoyed to date. The emperor, as it were, will have no clothes.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 2:22:00 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 2:22:00 AM|| Front Page Top

#9 I just about swerved off the road when I heard the ABC Radio (network) news reporter state that 'the insurgents [his word] had done a good job [his term] in intimidating the voters'.

The take-home message I get from that is: ABC considers Vote Suppression to be good when it happens in Iraq.
Posted by eLarson 2005-01-30 2:30:01 AM|| [http://larsonian.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 2:30:01 AM|| Front Page Top

#10  It looks like at least one of those early explosions were mortars:

Three people were killed when mortars landed near a polling station in Sadr City, the heart of Baghdad's Shiite Muslim community. Seven to eight others were wounded, police said.

In addition, two people were killed and three wounded when a mortar round missed a school serving as a polling centre and hit a nearby home in the neighborhood of Amel in southwestern Baghdad, said police Captain Mohammed Taha.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 2:59:13 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 2:59:13 AM|| Front Page Top

#11  And the Fallujah residents have started voting as well:

In Falluja, the devastated Sunni city west of Baghdad that was an insurgent stronghold until a U.S. assault in November, a thin stream of people turned out to vote, defying expectations.

"We want to be like other Iraqis, we don't want to always be in opposition," said Ahmed Jassim, smiling after voting.

In Baquba, a rebellious city northeast of Baghdad, crowds clapped and cheered at one voting site.

In Baghdad, a small group ululated as Sharif Ali bin al-Hussein, a descendant of Iraq's last king, overthrown in the late 1950s, went to the polls in southern Baghdad. Ali heads a constitutional monarchy list standing in the election.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:01:19 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:01:19 AM|| Front Page Top

#12  Hmm, this may explain why the coalition is so concerned about attacks:

There were ominous signs that today could be violent and chaotic. The police in Baghdad reported that 11 police cars had been stolen in the past 10 days, raising the possibility that insurgents could stage attacks on polling places -- as they have promised -- using one of the few types of cars that will be permitted to move freely on the streets today. Masked men have been spotted carrying away police flak jackets from the scenes of car bombings recently, and security agencies were warning journalists and others to be on the lookout for fake checkpoints that are manned by insurgents in disguise.

For all the thousands of soldiers and police officers on the streets, the security around many of the polling places appeared inadequate and improvised. Many of the barricades consisted of little more than a string of bricks, tin cans and cardboard boxes.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:09:41 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:09:41 AM|| Front Page Top

#13  And there's a big turn-out in Baghdad proper:

Large turnout was witnessed at polling stations in the different areas of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, on Sunday.

Witnesses told that many cast their votes in Sadr City, east of the capital, adding that many arrived early and the electoral process is going smoothly.

Women, elderly and those with special needs had difficulty getting to polling stations where traffic is currently restricted in the capital.

Large numbers of voters also cast their votes in Al-Saadoun, Al-Dawra, New Baghdad, Al-Ameen, Al-Shaab and Awar districts.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:18:43 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:18:43 AM|| Front Page Top

#14  Here comes Zarqawi's opening strike, let's hope the corpse count stays low:

Suicide bombers attacked at least three voting centers in western Baghdad on Sunday, killing a total of eight people, including three bombers, police and witnesses said.

One policeman was killed and nine people were injured in the first attack, which occurred in the Dawoudi neighborhood.

Another bomber struck the al-Quds school, killing three policeman and one civilian, officials said. Six people were wounded.

The third bomber attacked the Mutamaizen Secondary School in the Mansour district, injuring three policemen, officials said.


These could be the other unidentified explosions in Baghdad mentioned earlier. If they are, it is important to note that the Arab Times article I posted citing heavy turn-out in Baghdad post-dates these events.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:25:01 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:25:01 AM|| Front Page Top

#15  Rooters has more details on the bombings:

A suicide bomber strapped with explosives blew himself up at a polling centre in western Baghdad, killing at least four people and wounding nine, police sources said.

Earlier a suicide car bomb killed a policeman outside a polling station and another suicide bomber on foot blew himself up among voters queueing at another centre in western Baghdad, causing an unknown number of casualties.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:28:13 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:28:13 AM|| Front Page Top

#16  Even Rooters seems to admit things are going okay with respect to the security situation:

Some smiled, some were stoic and others kept their faces hidden as Iraqis trickled to the polls Sunday, braving anti-U.S. insurgents determined to drown the historic vote in blood.

In the relatively secure Kurdish north, people flowed steadily to the polls in Sulaimaniya and Arbil.

Families arrived on foot, went through strict security checks and then approached voting booths together under the watchful eyes of electoral officials and security guards.

In Samarra, a restive city north of Baghdad that has a mixed Sunni and Shi'ite population, the crackle of gunfire was heard minutes after polls opened.

A fighter jet roared over the city, which was shrouded in a chilly mist. After three hours, only about 80 people had voted at one of two polling sites. One woman, covered head to toe in black robes, kept her face hidden, but was proud to have voted.

In nearby Baiji, some people were unable to vote because electoral officials failed to turn up. "We are waiting for the manager with the key," said an election worker, apologizing for the mix-up. At one Tikrit station, only one voter pitched up.

In Mosul, Iraq's third largest city in the north of the country, where there is a mixed Sunni and Kurdish population and where the insurgency has been strong in recent months, U.S. officials said voting stations were busy and attacks were few.

"So far it's gone very well, much better than expected," said a U.S. officer, as small arms fire echoed in the distance.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:51:25 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:51:25 AM|| Front Page Top

#17  And all's quiet in Bulgarian-managed Diwaniyah:

The situation in the Iraqi city Diwaniyah, where the Bulgarian unit is located at peaceful at the movement, military officials announced.

Bulgaria's Defence Ministry once again reminded that the Bulgarian troops in Iraq won't be directly involved in guarding the polling stations in Diwaniyah, although the local Iraqi authorities have asked for that.

The soldiers will execute their everyday tasks- guarding the streets of the city and controlling the roads in the region.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 3:55:37 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 3:55:37 AM|| Front Page Top

#18 Thanks for the updates Mr. Darling. Me and the Missus are opening a exhibition later today, we are asking all those who visit to ink their index-fingers blue to show support for the Iraqi people.
Posted by ocasional lurker 2005-01-30 3:56:22 AM||   2005-01-30 3:56:22 AM|| Front Page Top

#19  Al-Jazeera, not surprisingly, has a pretty good break-down of the insurgent activities:

Meanwhile, Baghdad's al-Mansur district was hit by car bomb at a makeshift polling station in the Zahra school. Sources said six people were killed, including an Iraqi security member. Thirteen others were injured.

In northern Iraq, six explosions rocked Mosul early on Sunday, but there were no reported casualties. One polling station visited by the media was empty.

Similarly, a mortar shell landed near a polling station in the southern city of Basra, but there were no reports of causalities.

In the northern city of Balad, a mortar attack on a polling station killed one woman and wounded another and her child.

Meanwhile, mortar shells struck a polling station in Sadr City killing four voters and wounding seven others.

Also, few mortars exploded near the US military base in the northern city of Kirkuk shortly before the voting centres opened.

Further attacks were reported from voting stations in the city of al-Duluiya about 70km north of Baghdad.

In Latifiya, mortars struck two voting stations, an AFP correspondent reported. US troops killed one attacker and arrested 15 others, a US officer said.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 4:12:15 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 4:12:15 AM|| Front Page Top

#20  WaPo is finally running their main story on the elections. If the other major publications start to follow suit, it'll mean that things'll have gotten as bad as it is going to today, as Zarqawi's best advantage would be to attack early in the day:

Final deliveries of more than 7 million pounds of ballot boxes, voting forms, cardboard booths and indelible purple ink to stain voters' fingers were made Saturday to about 5,000 polling sites across the country. It remained unclear, however, how many of Iraq's estimated 14 million eligible voters would turn out in the face of daily threats by insurgents to attack polling stations and to track down and kill those who take part in the elections.

It also seems that Ramadi may well be under al-Qaeda occupation or at least contested, which may explain the absence of voters given Zarqawi's recent statements on how he feels about democracy.

"They should take part because this is the future in the making and people have to take their fate in their own hands," interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said in an interview with British television. "I ask them to participate in the elections whether they are inside or outside Iraq: Sunnis, Shiites, Kurds, Christians."

"We have been waiting for this moment for a month," said Malik Adan Hamid, 26, a polling worker at the Fine Arts Institute in Baghdad's Mansour district. "There is no fear at all. We were trained for this."

But half an hour after polls opened Sunday, ringed by Iraqi police and troops, only one local resident had voted. Laith Ali, 42, said he would be back later with his wife and mother.

"I don't know how to express this feeling because this is the first time I've done it," said Ali, a merchant.

Officials expected Iraqis to give polling places a wide berth in the morning hours, when attacks most often occur in Iraq and when insurgents likely would try to make an impression that would suppress turnout for the rest of the day. But a senior U.S. diplomat, speaking from the stricken embassy, said several factors, including the apparent disorganization of recent attacks, gave him hope that election day may be less violent than predicted.

"I have a certain faith in the human spirit," he said. "If we get through the morning, I think there's a very good chance it'll snowball and turnout will be much higher than anyone expects."

"It goes to the heart of the issue," said the diplomat, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak candidly. "If Iraqis don't want to stand up and fight for what is right for their country, we can't do it for them.

"But if they do, and they come out, then all the naysayers ought to think a little bit about whether we ought to go home, or if we ought to stay and support that. We'll find out tomorrow."

In the capital, security around the Green Zone on Saturday was extraordinary even by Baghdad standards, giving the city the air of a combat zone. No vehicles were allowed within three blocks of the only public entrance to the fortified complex, protected by tanks at both approaches. Iraqi police cars, before being allowed to proceed to their precinct house, formed a line to be searched by barrel-chested American security contractors and bomb-sniffing dogs.

In a striking scene outside the main checkpoint, American soldiers marched several dozen Iraqi men single-file down the center of the street, like prisoners of war. Each had been frisked and had a decal of the Iraqi flag pasted on his coat. "Election officials," explained the soldier bringing up rear.

"The election returns to us our legitimate rights," said Aquil Sudani, 26, stationed outside a Shiite mosque in Baghdad on Saturday, handing out campaign literature for the United Iraqi Alliance. Dubbed "the Shiite list" because it was assembled with the blessing of Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the most senior Shiite religious leader in Iraq, the alliance entered the six-week campaign as a heavy favorite.

"We are here to say to the world, 'By God, even if they sever our hands and legs, we shall crawl to the ballot booths to fulfill the pledge," thundered Jalaledin Saghir during Friday prayers at a Baghdad mosque favored by followers of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, whose clerical leader is listed first on the United Iraqi Alliance slate.

Sistani's portrait dominated the coalition's campaign posters, and mosques issued directions to polling stations. In recent days, however, the Shiite slate has appeared to back away from its overtly religious appeal, producing posters that feature not an ayatollah but a woman with luxurious brown hair.

"Where did that come from?" a senior British diplomat said. "That may mean the religious motif wasn't going over that well."

Allawi, appointed interim prime minister by the U.S.-led occupation authority before it returned political power to Iraqis in late June, was thought to be running strongly. A physician in a country where voters esteem the professional classes, and a secular Shiite, Allawi has run a well-funded campaign that quietly plays on his image of forceful leadership, not to mention fears that the Shiite list is supported by Iran.

"Of course our enemies are trying to break us and to break our world, and stop the process of our elections and the political process overall, but we are determined to move forward," Allawi said in the television interview.

Security concerns are highest in Sunni areas. Combat prevented advance voter registration in two provinces, Anbar and Nineveh, which includes Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city. Voters in both cities will be permitted to register at the polls on election day.

In Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, combat flared for much of Saturday. The city was emptied of many residents and all signs of local government, including a police force that bolted in the face of insurgent threats for the second time in three months. Two Iraqi military special battalions were dispatched to Ramadi to secure the city, and insurgents distributed leaflets boasting that "a number of policemen have repented" and quit.

Another flier, signed by the al Qaeda-affiliated insurgent group led by Abu Musab Zarqawi, warned, "We will wash the streets of Ramadi by the blood of the voters."
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 4:26:12 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 4:26:12 AM|| Front Page Top

#21  Polling still hasn't opened in 3 Sunni towns that were the main escape routes for the insurgent forces that fled south towards Baghdad post-Fallujah.

POLLING stations in several towns in Iraq's so-called 'Triangle of Death' have not opened four hours after nationwide voting started today, the country's electoral commission said.

"In Latifiyah, Mahmudiyah and Yusufiyah, polling stations have not yet opened their doors," commission spokesman Farid Ayar told reporters.

"Latifiyah, Mahmudiyah and Yusufiyah are hotspots. We have allowed residents of these areas to vote in the nearest polling station" to the towns, said another member of the commission.

In Latifiyah, mortars struck two voting stations.

US troops killed one attacker and arrested 15 others, a US military officer said.
Posted by Dan Darling  2005-01-30 4:28:49 AM|| [http://www.regnumcrucis.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 4:28:49 AM|| Front Page Top

#22 
Sunni extremists, fearing victory by the Shiites, have called for a boycott, claiming no vote held under U.S. military occupation is legitimate.

All the more reason to participate, so that the impact of the majority can be mitigated. But nooo, they want to boycott the elections.

Fine, go ahead and follow through with your silly ass boycott, but don't complain when you wake up and discover yourselves practically powerless. Damned idiots.
Posted by Bomb-a-rama 2005-01-30 4:40:24 AM||   2005-01-30 4:40:24 AM|| Front Page Top

#23 Fine work Dan.
Posted by Shipman 2005-01-30 7:15:58 AM||   2005-01-30 7:15:58 AM|| Front Page Top

#24 Dan,

Thanks.

Looks like dozens have been killed. This is not good, but if it is the best effort Z man can muster for an event of this importance, things must not be going too well for him.

The other interesting outcome is that turnout outliers will be unambiguous indicators of which areas are still under Z man's control and in need of the Fallujah touch. Sounds like someone is working on a list.
Posted by Mrs. Davis 2005-01-30 7:35:43 AM||   2005-01-30 7:35:43 AM|| Front Page Top

#25 Yup, nice job Dan.
This appears to be going better than anyone could have hoped.
Not to minimize the tragic loss of life, I was expecting a whole lot worse.
Seeing how success has many fathers, I wonder how the EU and the UN will weasel their way into sharing credit.
Posted by JerseyMike 2005-01-30 8:40:40 AM||   2005-01-30 8:40:40 AM|| Front Page Top

#26 According to Fox TV, a "suicide bomber" was actually a kid with Down Syndrome wearing an explosive belt that was detonated remotely...
Posted by Seafarious  2005-01-30 8:46:26 AM||   2005-01-30 8:46:26 AM|| Front Page Top

#27 I hope Fox is wrong on that. That's depraved beyond understanding.
Posted by Shipman 2005-01-30 9:48:29 AM||   2005-01-30 9:48:29 AM|| Front Page Top

#28 Shipman, it seems to me that it is coming from the same mindset that beheads while dancing around and singing Alahu Akbar. When you think they can get any more depraved that 'that', they show you they can.
Posted by Sobiesky 2005-01-30 9:55:50 AM||   2005-01-30 9:55:50 AM|| Front Page Top

#29 concur #27. Just when you think the evil bastards have hit bottom they continue to find new depths of depravity.
Posted by eLarson 2005-01-30 9:56:05 AM|| [http://larsonian.blogspot.com]  2005-01-30 9:56:05 AM|| Front Page Top

#30  According to Fox TV, a "suicide bomber" was actually a kid with Down Syndrome wearing an explosive belt that was detonated remotely...

Depraved, yes of course. But the Palestinian groups started doing the same kind of thing when they couldn't get 'normal' people to volunteer. So it's actually a good sign when the insurgents need to use society's rejects.
Posted by trailing wife 2005-01-30 11:48:46 AM||   2005-01-30 11:48:46 AM|| Front Page Top

#31 Dan Darling, thanks for the best news we have heard in a while!
I truly hope that Fox story is inaccurate. I grew up with a Down's Syndrome kid...he was the one that the rest of us neighborhood brats would defend (the worst thing you could have said about anyone in our neighborhood was "he's so weak he picks on a retard"...yeah, not politically correct, but it was the 70's - early 80's)
Posted by Desert Blondie 2005-01-30 12:12:24 PM|| [http://azjetsetchick.blogspot.com/]  2005-01-30 12:12:24 PM|| Front Page Top

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