IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Hundreds killed as suicide bomber rumour sparks Baghdad stampede |
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from Scotsman.com
Entered into the database on Wednesday, August 31st, 2005 @ 14:21:41 MST |
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A STAMPEDE sparked by rumours of a suicide bomber has killed at least 640 people
at a religious festival in Iraq. The crush caused a railing to collapse on a Baghdad bridge packed with Shia
worshippers sending crowds tumbling into the Tigris River. An Iraqi interior ministry source said most of the dead were women and children.
Survivor Fadhel Ali, 28, who jumped into the river to look for bodies, said:
"We were on the bridge. It was so crowded. Thousands of people surrounded
me. "We heard that a suicide attacker was among the crowd. Everybody was yelling,
so I jumped from the bridge into the river, swam and reached the bank. I saw
women, children and old men falling after me into the water." Health Minister Abdul-Mutalib Mohammed told state-run Iraqiya television: "There
were huge crowds on the bridge and the disaster happened when someone shouted
that there was a suicide bomber on the bridge. "This led to a state of panic among the pilgrims and they started to push
each other and there was many cases of suffocation." At least six people also died after drinking poisoned juice and food they received
around the mosque. Tensions had been running high after a mortar and rocket
attack two hours earlier killed at least seven people and injured at least 40
nearby. A police source said large crowds had been heading to the Kadhimiya mosque
in the old district of north Baghdad for a religious ceremony when someone shouted
that there was a suicide bomber among them. "Hundreds of people started running and some threw themselves off the
bridge into the river," he said. "Many elderly died immediately as
a result of the stampede but dozens drowned, many bodies are still in the river."
The crowd was celebrating the martyrdom of Musa Al-Kadhim, a revered religious
figure among Shias. After the disaster, thousands of people rushed to both banks
of the river searching for survivors. Hundreds of men stripped down and waded
into the muddy water downstream from the bridge trying to extract bodies floating
in the water. Television reports said about one million pilgrims from Baghdad and outlying
provinces had gathered near the Imam Mousa al-Kadim shrine for the annual commemoration
of the Shia saint's death. Iraq's Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari immediately declared three days of mourning.
Iraqis are currently preparing to vote on a proposed constitution for their
country, with Shia and Sunnis sharply divided on its contents. Today is the last day the majority of Iraqis can register to vote in October's
referendum on a new constitution. Despite the draft constitution, there has
been no sign of an easing in the insurgency waged by Sunni Muslims, dominant
under Saddam, and international guerrillas inspired by Osama bin Laden. The US-led coalition, which invaded Iraq in March 2003, has been battling insurgents
while Iraqis have tried to form a new post-Saddam constitution and government.
Shia religious festivals have often been targeted for attack by Sunni extremists
seeking to trigger civil war. In March last year, suicide attackers struck worshippers
at the Imam Kadhim shrine and a holy site in Karbala, killing at least 181.
The head of the country's major Sunni clerical group, the Association of Muslim
Sholars, said that the disaster was "another catastrophe and something
else that could be added to the list of ongoing Iraqi tragedies." "On this occasion we want to express our condolences to all the Iraqis
and the parents of the martyrs, who fell today in Kazimiyah and all over Iraq,"
the cleric, Haith al-Dhari said. Meanwhile, eyewitnesses said the town of Qaim, 200 miles north-west of Baghdad,
was virtually deserted today after a day of heavy fighting between the pro-government
Bumahl tribe and the pro-insurgent Karabilah tribe. Iraqi officials said 45 people had died in the clashes, during which hundreds
of residents fled their homes. The US military said jets bombed the region around Qaim and destroyed houses
used by "a known terrorist". • The court martial of seven British Paras accused of killing an Iraqi
civilian will begin on Monday, the MoD has said. The group - serving and former soldiers from the 3rd Battalion the Parachute
Regiment - are jointly charged with murder and a second joint charge of violent
disorder. The charges relate to the death of Nadhem Abdullah following a roadside
incident in May 2003 in Al U'Zayra in southern Iraq. |