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KurdistanObserver.com
Iraqi Military: 175 Kurds Killed Near Shingal
August 14, 2007
By KIM GAMEL
Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD (AP) - Four suicide bombers hit Kurdish Yazidi communities with nearly
simultaneous attacks on Tuesday, killing at least 175 people and wounding 200
others, said Iraqi military and local officials in northwest Iraq.
The death toll was the highest in a concerted attack since Nov. 23, when 215
people were killed by mortar fire and five car bombs in Baghdad's Shiite enclave
of Sadr City.
The bombs tore through the districts near Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul,
Iraq's third-largest city, said Abdul-Rahman al-Shimiri, the top government
official in the area, and Iraq army Capt. Mohammed Ahmed.
They said at least 30 homes were destroyed in the bombings.
Yazidis are members of an ancient, primarily Kurdish, religious sect that
worships an angel figure some that Christians and Muslims believe to be the
devil.
Dhakil Qassim, mayor of Sinjar, a town near the attacks, said al-Qaida in Iraq
was behind the bombings, citing what he said were Kurdish government
intelligence reports.
``This is a terrorist act and the people targeted are poor Yazidis who have
nothing to do with the armed conflict,'' Qassim said. ``Al-Qaida fighters are
very active in this area near the Syrian border.''
Witnesses also said U.S. helicopters swooped into the area to evacuate the wound
to hospitals in Dahuk, a Kurdish city near the Turkish border and about 60 miles
north of Qahataniya.
Civilians car and ambulances also rushed the wounded to hospitals in Dahuk,
police said.
Ghassan Salim, a 40-year-old Yazidi teacher said, he went to a local hospital to
donate blood after seeing lines of ambulances and cars carrying the wounded
toward Sinjar hospital.
``We went to the hospital and the wounded told us about the attacks. I gave
blood. I saw many maimed people with no legs or hands.
``Many of the wounded were left in the hospital garage or in the streets because
the hospital is small,'' he said.
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