Quantcast Rocky Mountain Collegian
College Media Network

 

Suicide bombing targets police recruits, kills 25

Robert H. Reid - AP

Issue date: 8/27/08 Section: News
  • Print
  • Email
Yasir Nawaf, 18, who was wounded in a suicide car bomb attack which struck a group of police recruits in the Diyala town of Jalula, arrives for treatment at a hospital in the northern town of Sulaimaniyah where some of the 40 wounded had been taken, in Iraq, Tuesday. A suicide bomber in a car laden with explosives sped toward a group of police recruits in Jalula, exploding and killing 25 people, police and witnesses said. (Yahya Ahmed)
Yasir Nawaf, 18, who was wounded in a suicide car bomb attack which struck a group of police recruits in the Diyala town of Jalula, arrives for treatment at a hospital in the northern town of Sulaimaniyah where some of the 40 wounded had been taken, in Iraq, Tuesday. A suicide bomber in a car laden with explosives sped toward a group of police recruits in Jalula, exploding and killing 25 people, police and witnesses said. (Yahya Ahmed)

BAGHDAD - A suicide bomber with explosives hidden beneath his traditional robe blew himself up Tuesday in a crowd of Iraqis trying to join the police force, killing at least 25 people in the second major bombing in Iraq this week.

The attack occurred in the town of Jalula, a remote, impoverished community about 80 miles northeast of Baghdad that lies in Diyala province, where a U.S.-Iraqi offensive is being waged against the last major insurgent stronghold near the capital.

The bomber mingled in the crowd of would-be police recruits and then detonated explosives hidden beneath his dishdasha robe, police said. The bomb was packed with nails and ball bearings to maximize casualties, police said.

Initial reports from police and the U.S. military said the bomber blew up an explosives-laden vehicle near the crowd, but authorities said later that officers first concluded erroneously that a parked car damaged by the blast had been used as a car bomb.

U.S. military officials said five policemen were among the dead.

Police guard Falah Hassan, 28, said he was standing at the gate of the Jalula police compound when he heard a thunderous explosion about 100 yards away and was hit by debris.

"I saw burned bodies, wounded people and small pools of blood," said Hassan, speaking from a hospital bed in Sulaimaniyah where some of the 40 wounded were taken.

The local police chief, Col. Ahmed Mahmoud Khalifa, said jobs in the police force are prized in Jalula, a mostly Sunni Arab town of 67,000 people with a substantial Kurdish population, because unemployment is high.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement


Advertisement

Home

Multimedia

News

Opinion

Sports

Cartoons

Entertainment

RamTalk

RamShots

Games

Sports Blog

Your Feat Blog

RSS Feeds

Buy Reprints

Poll

What is your favorite Thanksgiving dish?

Vote

View Results

Front Page PDF

Download Print Edition PDF