11 dead in latest Iraq violence

A series of drive-by shootings and a spate of bombings killed 11 people and wounded dozens more in Iraq today.

A series of drive-by shootings and a spate of bombings killed 11 people and wounded dozens more in Iraq today.

At least 30 people were injured in separate and apparently unrelated attacks, Iraqi police and hospital officials said. Five of the dead were Iraqi police and security forces.

In the most gruesome example, gunmen opened fire on worshippers as they were leaving dawn prayers in the town of Jurf al-Sakhr just south of the capital, killing three and wounding one, said Maj. Muthana Khalid, the spokesman for Babil province police.

Worshippers converge in high numbers on mosques during the holy month of Ramadan — a period devoted to prayer and dawn-to-dusk fasting.

Hours later, rush-hour bombings across Baghdad hit commuters on their way to work, killing four and wounding at least 16.

The deadliest strike came when a roadside bomb exploded next to a minibus heading from the Shia neighborhood of Sadr City into downtown that killed three people, including a police officer, a security official said.

Nine others were wounded in the early-morning attack. A hospital worker confirmed the casualties.

Also, three bombs planted a few yards apart in a downtown business district blew up simultaneously. Police and hospital officials said a bystander was killed and seven wounded.

Another roadside bomb targeted a traffic police patrol in eastern Baghdad, killing one person and wounding eight more, a police officer said. Two traffic policemen were among the wounded.

Traffic police, many of whom are unarmed, have become a new target for insurgents. More than a dozen have been killed in shootings and bombings across Iraq recently.

An attempted assassination of a senior police official from the northern Ninevah province visiting Baghdad killed one of his bodyguards and wounded another when a bomb attached to his car exploded in the southern Dora neighborhood.

Meanwhile, gunmen in a speeding car attacked an Iraqi army checkpoint in the northern city of Mosul, killing one soldier and wounding another, local police said.

A bomb attached to the car of a local commander of an anti-al-Qaeda militia in the western Baghdad suburb of Abu Ghraib exploded, killing him and wounding two of his bodyguards.

AP