127 Iraqis killed in spate of deadly bombings in Baghdad

·Five massive car bombings hit Baghdad Tuesday, killing 127 people and wounding 448.
·The latest wave of deadly bombings is the third of such attacks since August.
·The attacks came hours before Iraq fixed a new date for the parliamentary elections.

by Jamal Hashim, Ghassan Awad

BAGHDAD, Dec. 8 -- Five massive car bombings hit the Iraqi capital on Tuesday, killing a total of 127 people and wounding 448, in the third deadliest series of attacks since August.

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Iraqi armed police stand guard at a building damaged during a bomb attack in Baghdad, capital of Iraq, Dec. 8, 2009. Five blasts hit Baghdad on Tuesday, killing at least 127 people and injuring another 448.

The attacks came hours before the Iraqi presidency council fixed a new date for the country's crucial parliamentary elections on March 6.

The first attack occurred at about 10:25 a.m. (0725 GMT) when a car loaded with explosives went off at the park of the new seat of the Finance Ministry after a massive truck bombing on August 19 badly damaged its original building in Waziriya district.

Seconds later, another car bombing took place near an intersection close to the Interior Ministry in eastern Baghdad, while a third car bombing detonated in the park of a court near the Institution of Fine Arts in Baghdad's western district of Mansour.

The bombing at the court building apparently targeted the part of the building occupied by the federal court which moved recently from its original place in the building of the Justice Ministry in Salhiyah which was destroyed by a massive truck bombing on October25.

A minute later, a fourth car bombing carried out by a minibus loaded with explosives went off at the intersection of the Nidaa mosque, near the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs in the al-Qahira neighborhood in northeastern Baghdad.

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Debris are scattered over the site of a bomb attack in Baghdad, capital of Iraq, Dec. 8, 2009. Five blasts hit Baghdad on Tuesday, killing at least 127 people and injuring another 448.

The powerful blast destroyed dozens of civilian cars which were crowded at the intersection.

"I saw dozens of cars were charred and many bodies were scattered at the site and some parts of human bodies were thrown on the roofs of nearby buildings," Jamal al-Obiedi, a witness at the scene told Xinhua.

Footage of the Iraqi local television al-Sharqiya showed the finance ministry bombing destroyed parts of its building and many old houses in the nearby impoverished neighborhood were damaged.

A total of 112 people were killed and 425 wounded by the four coordinated bombings in Baghdad, the Interior Ministry said in its latest toll reports.

Earlier in the day, a suicide bomber drove his explosive-laden car into a police patrol in Baghdad's southern district of Doura, killing 15 people, including three policemen, and wounding 23 people.

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Rescuers work at the site of a bomb attack in Baghdad, capital of Iraq, Dec. 8, 2009.

The latest wave of deadly bombings is the third of such attacks since August 19 when suicide truck bombings struck the ministries of foreign affairs and finance, and the attacks on Oct. 25 when insurgents hit the buildings of Baghdad Provincial Council and the Justice Ministry.

The attacks came hours before the Iraqi Presidency Council announced that March 6, 2010 is the date of holding the crucial parliamentary elections in the country.

The presidency decision came two days after Iraqi lawmakers unanimously agreed on controversial amendments on the electoral law that would govern the war-torn country's national elections.

Originally, the election was slated for January 16, but months of debate among Iraqi politicians to pass the amendments needed to the law in an attempt to reform the elections process to make it more representative for Iraqis inside and outside the country.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki condemned Tuesday's bloody attacks, renewing his accusation to the remnants of Saddam Hussein's Baath party and the al-Qaida militants for committing such deadly attacks.

"The terrorist gangs backed by both remnants of Baath party outside Iraq and al-Qaida, committed another massacre carrying the same black fingerprints which have always plunged into the blood of innocents," Maliki said in a statement issued by his office in the afternoon.

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Rescuers work at the site of a bomb attack in Baghdad, capital of Iraq, Dec. 8, 2009.

Maliki also said that the attacks came after the Iraqi parliament succeeded in passing the last stumbling block toward the country's landmark elections, confirming that "Iraq's foes are only aimed at inciting chaos in the country and halting any progress in the political process."

The number of deaths by violence in the war-ravaged country had dropped to its lowest level in November since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, when official monthly figures showed that 122 people had been killed in the country.
(Xinhua)

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