Three Killed in Baghdad Car Bombing
BAGHDAD, Iraq – A car bomb exploded Tuesday in central Baghdad outside the offices of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, killing three people and injuring 20, the military said.
Ambulances raced to the scene near the headquarters of the U.S.-run coalition, and U.S. troops kept people back. TV video showed debris and a charred wall of a building.
A roadside bomb also exploded near the U.S. military base in Beiji in northern Iraq, killing 11 Iraqis – including seven members of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps – and wounding 23 others. Two U.S. 1st Infantry Division Soldiers were wounded and evacuated to a combat hospital, together with 16 Iraqis who were hurt.
The Baghdad blast ripped through the building in the early afternoon, shortly after a party attended by hundreds of people. The event was intended to celebrate the founding of the PUK, which is seen as being close to the Americans.
Under the leadership of Jalal Talabani, the party represented one of the main anti-Saddam forces on Iraqi soil after the Gulf War. Fighters from the party backed American forces in last year’s invasion.
Talabani, who holds a seat on the Governing Council, was not in the offices when the blast occurred, a party spokesman said.
Most of the injured were outside the offices and were struck by flying glass, said Lt. Col. Robert Campbell of the 38th Calvary Unit in the 1st Calvary Division.
The bomb was one of several blasts heard in the capital just after reports circulated that Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer, current head of the Iraqi Governing Council, had been selected as president of the interim government set to take power June 30.
Another blast, followed by gunfire, sent a cloud 100 feet billowing into the dusty air hanging over the city. The blast near the PUK offices was heard shortly afterward.
Coalition aircraft could be heard flying over Baghdad.
The Beiji blast occurred around 9 a.m. outside the gates of the 1st Infantry Division’s forward operating base, Summerall, about 155 miles north of Baghdad, Capt. Bill Coppernoll said.
