Smoke
was
seen
rising
on
Monday
near
the
Green
Zone
compound
where
the
interim
Iraqi
government
of
Prime
Minister
Iyad
Allawi
and
the
US
embassy
are.
Allawi
was
not
in
the
area
at
the
time
of
the
blast, officials
in
the
prime
minister's
office
said.
US
and
Iraqi
troops
sealed
off
the
area
and
helicopters
buzzed
overhead.
Ambulances
were
also
seen
rushing to
the
site.
Iraqi
journalist
Ziyad
al-Samarrai
told
Aljazeera
that
the
car
bomber
attempted
to
enter
the
headquarters
of
the
Iraqi
National
Accord
(al-Wifaq)
party
headed
by
Allawi,
but
he
was
stopped at
an
Iraqi
police
checkpoint.
The
bomber detonated
his
vehicle
at
the
checkpoint
as
he
could
not
pass
through
them,
he
added.
Roads
closed
According
to
al-Samarrai,
all
roads were
closed
and
no
one was
allowed
to
approach
the
area
after
the
attack.
 |
|
Fighters
have
waged
a
campaign
to
disrupt
the 30
January polls
|
He
added
that
Iraqi
security
forces
opened
heavy
gunfire
after
the
explosion
took
place.
More
injured
people,
including
civilians
and
policemen,
are
still
arriving
at
Yarmuk
hospital,
a
medical
source
at
the
hospital
told
al-Samarrai.
Al-Zarqawi-linked
group,
al-Qaida
Group
in
the
Land
of
Two
Rivers,
purportedly
published
a
statement
on
the
internet
claiming
responsibility
for
the
attack.
The
statement
could
not
be
verified.
Another
explosion
on
Monday
rocked
an
electoral
centre at
a
school
in
the
new
Baghdad
area
in
southern
Baghdad
city,
destroying
the
outer
fence
of
the
centre
and
the
front
of
the
building,
al-Samarrai
said.
Earlier
this
month,
a
car
bomber
targeted
the
same
offices
of
Allawi's
party.
Four
people
were
killed
and
25
injured
in
that
attack.
Fighters targeting
US-led
troops
and
Iraq's
interim
government
have
mounted
frequent car
bomb
attacks
and
ambushes
against
Iraqi
security
forces
in
the
run-up
to
the
country's
30
January
elections.