Baghdad - Jaafar Al Nasrawi
Man inspects damage at a cafe following a suicide bombing in Balad in Baghdad
Attacks in Iraq killed 13 people on Tuesday, including four who died in a blast targeting Shiite worshipers, while militants bombed a major oil pipeline, halting exports, officials said.
The attacks are the latest in a surge in violence that security forces have failed to curb, despite carrying out major operations against militants said to have resulted in scores of arrests, including 82 on Monday.
In the deadliest attack on Tuesday, a car bomb exploded after midday prayers at al-Zahraa husseiniyah, a Shiite place of worship south of Baghdad, killing four people and wounding 14.
Militants have carried out attacks on both Sunni and Shiite mosques this year, raising fears of a return to all-out sectarian conflict in Iraq, which peaked in 2006-2007 and killed tens of thousands of people.
In the northern province of Kirkuk, another car bomb killed three police, while bombings also killed a soldier, a Sahwa anti-al-Qaeda fighter and two civilians in Salaheddin province, north of the capital
And in Nineveh province, also in north Iraq, gunmen shot dead a former soldier and a civilian.
Militants also bombed a major pipeline carrying oil from northern Iraq to Turkey, near the town of Albu Jahash in Nineveh province.
The attack halted exports via the pipeline, a senior official from the North Oil Company said, adding that production was still continuing, but the oil was being stored.
Repairing the pipeline, which runs from the northern Iraqi oil hub of Kirkuk to the port of Ceyhan in Turkey, is expected to take between one and three days, the official said.
The attacks came a day after bombs targeting a café, a football field and a market in areas north of Baghdad killed 28 people.
The interior ministry on Monday announced the arrest of 82 suspected militants in Salaheddin and Diyala provinces, 56 of them at an alleged al-Qaeda training camp.
Sources told Arab Today that an additional 11 people were arrested on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, eader in the Iraqi Front for National Dialogue, Haidar al-Molla, called for a vote of confidence against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and having charges brought against him “for his ?unilateralism and mismanagement of the security issue.” Al-Molla said he holds Maliki solely responsible for the collapse of security in Iraq and the several jail breaks that resulted in the escape of hundreds of militants
During the last year, Maliki has faces several calls for a vote of confidence from a number of political parties, most notably the al-Sadr bloc, the Iraqi List and the Kurdistan Alliance. Maliki’s own party, State of law, warned against the consequences such a move could potentially have on the country’s political process, however the demands for a vote of confidence have not been met so far due to political infighting.
Authorities have repeatedly highlighted security operations -- among the largest since US forces departed in December 2011 -- which they say have led to the killing or capture of many militants.
But whatever gains the operations have made, they have failed to stop the bloodshed.
Violence in Iraq has increased markedly this year, with analysts saying the upsurge is driven by anger among the Sunni Arab minority that the Shiite-led government has failed to address, despite months of protests.
Attacks have killed 3,421 people in Iraq since the beginning of 2013, according to figures compiled by AFP -- an average of more than 15 per day.
Additional source: AFP