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IRAQ WARS
Baghdad car bombs kills at least 17
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 04, 2014


Jihadists kidnap dozens in north Iraq village
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Sept 04, 2014 - Jihadists kidnapped dozens of residents of a northern Iraq village on Thursday after villagers burned one of their positions along with a jihadist flag, police and witnesses said.

The militants of the Islamic State (IS) group had withdrawn from Tal Ali in Kirkuk province on Wednesday, but returned in force on Thursday and abducted some 50 people, the sources said.

It is not the first time IS has carried out mass kidnappings in Iraq, with the group abducting thousands of civilians as it overran minority-populated northern villages last month, according to human rights group Amnesty International.

Amnesty has accused IS of "systematic ethnic cleansing," including mass killings, of ethnic and religious minorities in Iraq.

A senior UN rights official has said the group is responsible for "acts of inhumanity on an unimaginable scale."

IS-led militants launched a lightning offensive in the north in June, sweeping through much of the Sunni Arab heartland north and west of Baghdad before turning on Christian and Yazidi areas.

Iraqi security forces, now bolstered by thousands of Shiite militiamen as well as Kurdish fighters, have clawed back some ground northeast of Baghdad.

But significant areas, including parts of Kirkuk province, remain under militant control.

Two car bombs exploded in Shiite-majority areas of the Iraqi capital Thursday, killing at least 17 people, security and medical officials said.

The first blast struck an area of shops, restaurants and cafes in the Kadhimiyah area of northern Baghdad, killing at least 11 people and wounding 32.

Another car bomb exploded later near alcohol shops in the central district of Karrada, killing at least six people and wounding 17, officials said.

At the site of that blast, security forces gathered around the mangled remains of a car that apparently carried the explosives, which sat in a narrow median.

Two people still at the scene of the blast, which smashed storefronts and left broken glass hundreds of metres (yards) away, were lightly wounded.

Sirens screamed as security forces trucks and ambulances arrived and departed.

Jihadists frequently target areas populated by Shiites, whose faith they consider heresy, and also often strike crowded places in a bid to cause maximum casualties.

Iraq is struggling to regain ground from a sweeping jihadist-led insurgency that has overrun chunks of five provinces since it was launched in June.

But significant portions of the country, especially Baghdad, have suffered through years of bombings.

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