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Iraq car bomber kills at least 24 in Shiite city

Hillah town center packed with shoppers and people going to work

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Iraq suicide bomber strikes Hillah
July 24: A car bomb detonated in a major Shiite city south of Baghdad killing more than 20 people. MSNBC.com's Dara Brown reports.

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updated 5:53 a.m. ET July 24, 2007

BAGHDAD - A suicide bomber struck a busy commercial center in a major Shiite city south of Baghdad on Tuesday, killing at least 24 people and wounding dozens as the streets were packed with shoppers and people on their way to work, police and hospital officials said.

The explosion occurred at 9 a.m. in Hillah, according to provincial police, who said the driver of the tow truck detonated his payload in the middle of the Bab al-Mashhad district. Iraqi troops cordoned off the area while fire engines and ambulances rushed to the scene.

Eassam Rashid, 32, was selling vegetables at his stall when the blast sent shrapnel over his head.

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Witnesses describe ‘fire ball’
“I heard a tremendous explosion followed by a fire ball,” he said. “Then nearby cars were set ablaze one by one and I saw four or five people struggling to get out of their burning cars.”

Most of the 24 killed and 69 wounded in the blast suffered serious burns, said Ayad Abdul-Zahra of the Hillah general hospital.

Hillah, about 60 miles south of Baghdad, has been the site of some of the deadliest bombings, including a double suicide attack on March 6 that killed 120 people.

The attack came a day after at least 16 people died when four car bombs rocked the center of the capital. Three of the blasts took place in one 30-minute span.

Police, morgue and hospital officials reported a total of at least 59 people killed or found dead nationwide Monday, and the American military announced the deaths of three soldiers and a Marine. At least 3,636 members of the U.S. military have died since the Iraq war began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The continued fighting and deaths of Iraqis and American forces in the sixth month of the American bid to calm Baghdad and the center of the country illuminate the stubborn resistance to a political solution in Iraq.

U.S.-Iranian talks in Baghdad
The government and legislature are under heavy U.S. pressure to overcome sectarian differences and agree to measures aimed at promoting national unity as Americans are engaged in a fierce debate over calls to bring U.S. troops home from the unpopular war.

The U.S. and Iranian ambassadors to Iraq also began talks Tuesday in Baghdad in a bid to find ways to use their influence to bring stability to Iraq despite rising tensions over Washington’s allegations that Tehran is fueling the violence and disputes over detainees.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki opened the meeting with a statement welcoming the attendants at his headquarters in the heavily fortified Green Zone.

The meeting was closed to the media, but photos released by the Iraqi leader’s office showed the participants sitting at three long tables for each delegation linked in triangular fashion and covered with white cloths. Al-Maliki was joined by Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, while the U.S. delegation was headed by Ambassador Ryan Crocker and the Iranians by Hasan Kazemi Qomi.

Hundreds of demonstrators, meanwhile, marched in the predominantly Shiite district of Shaab in northern Baghdad to protest a U.S.-Iraqi barricade of Husseiniyah, a town on the capital’s northeastern outskirts that is known as a Shiite militia stronghold. Police issued calls for residents to leave the town, and some said they were running out of food and fuel.


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