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Iraq: Suicide Bomber Kills 25 West of Baghdad

by: Kim Gamel  |  The Associated Press

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A member of the Sunni anti-Qaeda "Awakening Council" monitors a Baghdad checkpoint. On Sunday, a suicide attack on an Awakening Council meeting killed at least 25 people. (Photo: AFP)

    Baghdad - A suicide bomber blew himself up Sunday in the midst of a celebration to welcome home an Iraqi detainee released from U.S. custody, killing at least 25 people, Iraqi officials said.

    The U.S. military, meanwhile, announced the arrest of an al-Qaida in Iraq figure who allegedly planned the 2006 kidnapping of American journalist Jill Carroll - one of the highest-profile attacks against Westerners in Iraq.

    The suicide attack occurred inside one of several tents set up outside a house in the Abu Ghraib area on Baghdad's western outskirts, according to residents and police. It was unclear if the former detainee was among the casualties.

    A woman who was wounded but declined to give her name for security reasons said she was preparing food behind the tents when the blast occurred at about 9 p.m., knocking her and her three young children off their feet.

    Residents and police said Ayyid Salim al-Zubaie, a local sheik in the mainly Sunni area, had invited dozens of guests to a banquet in honor of his son, who was released earlier in the day from Camp Bucca in southern Iraq.

    Residents said the detainee-son had quarreled with al-Qaida members while in detention and may have been the target of the attack.

    The guests also included several members of the local awakening council, a U.S.-allied group that has turned against al-Qaida.

    Yassir al-Jumaili, a doctor at the hospital in nearby Fallujah where most of the wounded were taken, gave the death toll as 25 and said at least 29 other people were wounded.

    The blast was a grim reminder of the dangers still facing Iraqis despite a sharp decrease in violence after the 2007 U.S. troop buildup, a Sunni decision to join forces with the Americans against al-Qaida and a Shiite militia cease-fire.

    The announcement of the arrest of Salim Abdullah Ashur al-Shujayri, also known as Abu Othman, was a major breakthrough in a series of kidnappings.

    He was captured Aug. 11 in Baghdad and accused of being "the planner behind the kidnapping" of Carroll, a Christian Science Monitor reporter who was seized Jan. 7, 2006 and released three months later, according to the military.

    The statement also said al-Shujayri's associates were involved in the kidnappings of Christian peace activists and British aid worker Margaret Hassan, but did not elaborate.

    Kidnappings of Westerners forced foreigners to flee Iraq or take refuge in heavily guarded compounds, diminishing the ability of aid groups and journalists to operate. Many of the victims were butchered and their deaths recorded on videotapes distributed to Arab satellite TV stations or posted on the Web.

    Hassan, 59, the director of CARE international in Iraq, was abducted in Baghdad in October 2004 and shown on a video pleading for her life, calling on British Prime Minister Tony Blair to withdraw troops from Iraq.

    She was killed a month later, but her body was never found. The case drew special attention because Hassan, who was married to an Iraqi, had lived in the country for 30 years and spent nearly half her life helping Iraqis.

    Four men from the Chicago-based group, Christian Peacemaker Teams, disappeared Nov. 26, 2005, in Baghdad and videotapes later showed them in captivity. One of the hostages, American Tom Fox, 54, of Clear Brook, Va., was found shot dead. The other three - two Canadians and a Briton - were later rescued.

    Carroll was seized in west Baghdad and her interpreter was killed. The kidnappers, a formerly unknown group calling itself the Revenge Brigade, demanded the release of all women detainees in Iraq. U.S. officials freed some female detainees but said the decision was unrelated to the demands.

    The statement said U.S. troops also captured another al-Qaida figure - Ali Rash Nasir Jiyad al-Shammari - on Aug. 17 in Baghdad. He was accused of being a senior adviser for the terror network and funneling money, weapons and explosives to insurgents in the capital "during its most active operational period in early 2007," the military said.

    Al-Shammari, also known as Abu Tiba, personally approved targets for car and suicide bombings targeting Iraqi civilians, the military said.

    The military statement said al-Qaida in Iraq conducted almost 300 bombings, killing more than 1,500 civilians and wounding more than twice that many in 2007, compared with 28 attacks that killed 125 Iraqi civilians in the first half of this year.

    "The capture of Abu Tiba and Abu Othman eliminates two of the few remaining experienced leaders in the AQI network," said military spokesman Rear Adm. Patrick Driscoll.

    Also Sunday, the U.S. military said a 13-year-old girl wearing a bomb-laden vest surrendered to Iraqi police in Baqouba rather than blow herself up. She led police to a second suicide vest and was detained, the military said.

    Women have increasingly been recruited by insurgents to carry out attacks because it's easier for them to evade security checks.

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    Associated Press writer Saad Abdul-Kadir contributed to this report.

  

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Those Iraqis sure have guts.

Those Iraqis sure have guts. I couldn't imagine in this current United States a patriot who would willingly give up his or her life to defend against a occupying power in such a manner. I am reminded of a photo I saw once of Japanese university students (and others), outfitted with baseball bats and football helmets, lined up across an air-strip in Japan to stop the US trade rep from landing. I was so inspired by their unity and their willingness to do the hard work of democracy and make a stand for the official injustice they saw, yet I was at the same time disheartened because I realized how foreign such meaningful acts of vital civil disobedience were to US public demonstrations, to 'thinkable' thought. I was struck with how seriously the students understood the threat every police force poses to the liberty of the citizens (even ours!) in a way that is, sadly, barely understood in these United States, even when the tyrants are our own. The US has never really had to fear invasion, but supposing that were the case... Many Americans would be guilty of 'war crimes' were they to take up sabotage or armed resistance (in the eyes of the occupying power), and perhaps even some would spontaneously form into an American Underground or Resistance, but I wonder how many of them would have the audacity, and yes even the patriotism, to take out themselves, along with as many of the invaders as and their quislings as possible in the act of the supreme sacrifice. Having few options left, a powerless people still does what it can to free itself from the yoke of any leader, foreign or domestic, who would put himself above others, no matter what The Law says. No man who would willingly enslave himself, deserves his freedom, for he doesn't know what it is he had. Our leaders and their Masters perpetually demand that we trust their worst fears. We must cage ourselves in, watch everyone, these fearful men insist. Never do they have us trust our hopes. They do not inspire fearlessness in us, as good leaders do. Instead of freedom, they offer wage-slavery by day and jail cells by night. Yes, our suburban cells are velvet-lined, have golden bars and endless entertainment, but they are jail cells just the same. I am more and more convinced with every newly-minted crisis, that it may take allowing the crooks to steal it all before the American people realize that the theft has taken place. The Americans have become convinced by Christian mythology that they deserve to be punished anyway. Perhaps this FED-manufactured economic collapse --(the US people now owe huge money to the bankers, and they control the US money supply -- remember: all their money is issued to us WITH INTEREST. And as they issue/control the fiat paper used to 'pay it back', and that too comes with interest, the debt is never-ending and will/has enslave(d) us all as Jefferson and Madison said it would. The bankers have no desire to see us getting out of debt.)-- the deprivation required for a better 'stable investment climate' is exactly what it is going to take to shake the rest of the American people out of their stupor. But then, our Masters are pretty sure they can keep us as distracted with sex and religion and TV and as fearful as ever, and unless some fundamental change occurs in public perception, I think theirs is a pretty safe bet.