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Scores killed in Iraq market blasts
Many more are injured in two explosions at crowded bazaars in Baghdad.
Last Modified: 07 Feb 2008 07:13 GMT
The bombings occurred during busy periods of
Friday morning market trading [AFP]
At least 65 people have been killed and about 149 injured by bomb blasts in two crowded markets in Baghdad, police have said.
 
A female suicide bomber detonated explosives at about 10:20am (0720 GMT) at the al-Ghazl pet market in the centre of the Iraqi capital on Friday morning, killing at least 38 people, police said.
Another bomb at a bird market in southeast Baghdad's al-Jadida district killed at least 27 people, police said.
 
Brigadier General Qassim al-Moussawi, Iraq's chief military spokesman in Baghdad, said the women were mentally disabled and may have been unaware they were on a suicide mission.
"We found the mobiles used to detonate the women," he said, referring to the remote detonated devices that were used in the attack.
 
Previous attacks
 
An official at Baghdad's al-Kindi hospital said in the wake of the blasts: "We have a disaster here. There are too many bodies to count. Many of them are just pieces of flesh."
 
Al-Ghazl market has been the target of several
bomb attacks in recent months [AFP]
Al-Ghazl market has been struck several times since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, and had only recently begun to recover as a popular venue amid tightened security.

A bomb attack in November at al-Ghazl killed at least 13 people, with the US military blaming it on Iranian-backed Shia fighters.
 
Hoda Abdel Hamid, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Baghdad, said that the US and the Iraqi government were facing one of their sternest tests yet.
 
"There is so much security on the streets [of Baghdad]. Every single neighbourhood is guarded by blast walls. There has been practically a vehicle ban and curfew here for the past two years.
 
"As they lift these very stringent security measures, the attacks come back, in the soft spots of the town."
 
Abdel Hamid said that an increasing poroprtion of suicide bomb attackers were women, especially in Baghdad and in the province of Diyala, which lies northeast of the capital.
 
"One of the reasons for that is because it is mainly men who get thoroughly checked when they enter crowded areas - whether it is a market or buildings," she said.
 
Friday's attacks come as Iraqi officials reported that civilian deaths across Iraq in January fell to their lowest level in nearly two years.
 
Combined figures obtained from the defence, interior and health ministries showed that a total of 541 Iraqis were killed in January, compared to 887 in October.
 
US military commanders say attacks of all types are down to levels not seen since before February 2006.
Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies
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