Monday, November 29, 2004

7 Car bombs discovered in Mosque!

Raid at mosque reveals use as car-bomb factoryThe Iraqi national guard raided the Sunni Muslim Al Yassen Mosque in southern Baghdad and found seven cars rigged with explosives. A car bomb in Samarra, north of the capital, killed six people.BY OMAR JASSIMKnight Ridder News Service
BAGHDAD - A mosque raided by security forces in southern Baghdad contained a workshop to rig suicide car bombs, with seven vehicles ready for terror attacks, an Iraqi Defense Ministry official said Sunday.
Car bombings and remote-controlled roadside blasts have become routine in the Iraqi capital in recent weeks, including a blast Sunday that wounded two U.S. soldiers.
Meanwhile, Iraq's most feared terror group, led by Abu Musab al Zarqawi, claimed responsibility Sunday for slaughtering members of the Iraqi security forces in Mosul, where dozens of bodies have been found, The Associated Press reported. The claim raises fears the terror group has expanded to the north after the loss of its purported base in Fallujah.
ARMS DEPOT
National guard forces raided the Sunni Muslim Al Yassen Mosque in the southern Baghdad area of Abu Dshir on Saturday, said Gen. Saleh Sarhan of the Defense Ministry. In addition to seven cars rigged with explosives, the guardsmen found 30 rocket-propelled grenades, high-powered rifles, mortars and remote control detonators, Sarhan said.
''The national guard arrested the imam of the mosque,'' Sarhan said, and detained an additional 18 people suspected of involvement in the car bombings.
Anti-U.S. insurgents used 60 mosques in the city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, to stockpile weapons and provide cover during a U.S.-led offensive against the city earlier this month, the U.S. military says. One of the mosques was described as a general arms depot capable of equipping insurgents across much of Iraq.
Both Sunni and Shiite Muslim clerics are deeply opposed to the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, and many Sunni clerics also reject elections scheduled for Jan. 30.
In Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, a car bomb killed six people.
Another car bomb exploded on a perilous road leading to Baghdad's airport, wounding two U.S. soldiers and damaging a military vehicle, a military statement said. There were no civilian casualties.
Elsewhere, insurgents lobbed mortars near a police station in Baqouba, a city 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, police said. Two officers and a woman were injured.
BLOODY CAMPAIGN
Iraqi and U.S. forces around the northern city of Mosul arrested 43 suspected rebels, a U.S. military spokesman said. As U.S.-led forces attacked Fallujah earlier this month, insurgents in Mosul rose up in a bloody campaign against civilians. Security forces found 17 bodies around the city on Friday, and 15 on Thursday, Army Lt. Col. Paul Hastings said.
A statement posted on an Islamist website in the name of al Qaeda in Iraq, led by Zarqawi, claimed responsibility for killing 17 members of Iraq's security forces and a Kurdish militiaman in Mosul, The AP reported.
The claim could not be independently verified but the style of writing appeared similar to other statements by Zarqawi's group, which is responsible for numerous car bombings and beheadings of foreign hostages in Iraq.
The United States has offered a $25 million reward for Zarqawi's capture -- the same amount it is offering for Osama bin Laden.
At least 50 people have been killed in Mosul in the past 10 days.
Most of the victims are believed to have been supporters of Iraq's interim government or members of its fledgling security forces.
Among those arrested in recent days are a number of Islamic jihadists, or fighters, from outside of Iraq.
Sarhan said police over the weekend captured a Saudi citizen, Faisal Ganem, carrying two grenades and a map of Fallujah.
Last week, Basra police arrested two Saudis, two Tunisians, a Sudanese and a Libyan who allegedly arrived in the city from Fallujah to carry out a bombing campaign.
Knight Ridder correspondent Tim Johnson contributed to this report.

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