Car bombing at busy marketplace kills at least 52 in Baghdad's Sadr City
Wissm al-Okili/Reuters
The bomb was set off inside the Oreba market, a crowded marketplace that has been targeted at least twice in the past year, according to the Washington Post. At least 19 women and six children are believed to have been killed.
"The market was so crowded," Haider Salah, a 28-year-old taxi driver who witnessed the attack, told the Washington Post.
"At that time of the morning, the market is filled with women and their children."
Security has gradually improved in the Iraqi capital, which was the target of daily bombings a decade ago, but violence directed against the security forces and Shi'ite civilians is still frequent. Large blasts sometimes set off reprisal attacks against the minority Sunni community.
The fight against Islamic State, which seized about a third of Iraq's territory in 2014, has exacerbated a long-running sectarian conflict in Iraq mostly between Sunnis and the Shi'ite majority that emerged after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. Such violence threatens to undermine U.S.-backed efforts to dislodge the militant group.
Wissm al-Okili/Reuters
A pickup truck packed with explosives went off at rush hour near a beauty salon in a bustling market. Many of the victims were women including several brides who appeared to be getting ready for their weddings, the sources said.
The bodies of two men said to be grooms were found in an adjacent barber shop. Wigs, shoes and children's toys were scattered on the ground outside. At least two cars were destroyed in the explosion, their parts scattered far from the blast site.
Reuters
Islamic State said in a statement circulated online by supporters that a suicide bomber called Abu Ali Ansari had carried out the attack, which targeted Shi'ite militia fighters gathered in the area.
Iraqi forces backed by airstrikes from a nearly two-year-old U.S.-led campaign have driven the group back in the western province of Anbar and are preparing for an offensive to retake the northern city of Mosul. But the militants are still able to strike outside territory they control.
The ultra-hardline Sunni jihadist group, which considers Shi'ites apostates, has claimed recent attacks across the country as well as a twin suicide bombing in Sadr City in February that killed 70 people.
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