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IRAQ WARS
At least 13 killed in Baghdad car bombing: police
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 3, 2015


Canada PM visits Iraq after air war extension
Baghdad (AFP) May 2, 2015 - Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper made an unannounced visit to Iraq on Saturday days after lawmakers extended and expanded the NATO member's air campaign against the Islamic State jihadist group.

Harper held talks with his Iraqi counterpart Haider al-Abadi in Baghdad before heading to the autonomous Kurdish region in the north where Ottawa has military trainers deployed to assist the fightback against the jihadists.

Abadi's office said the allies had discussed "the war being waged by Iraq against the terrorist bands of Daesh (IS) and the international support being provided to Iraq in this campaign."

Canada is the only Western ally so far to have joined the United States in carrying out air strikes against IS in neighbouring Syria as well as Iraq.

European allies and Australia have joined the air campaign in Iraq but in Syria Washington has otherwise had to depend on Arab allies for support.

Canadian lawmakers voted to expand the air campaign to Syria on Monday over leftwing opposition to Harper's ruling Conservatives.

Ottawa first joined the US-led air strikes on IS in Iraq in November.

Harper has defended the need for expanded sorties, saying the IS group "must cease to have any safe haven in Syria."

But opposition parties warned that the air campaign might embroil Canada in a regional conflict that could drag on for decades.

At least 13 people were killed by a car bomb in Baghdad on Saturday, police said, in one of the deadliest attacks in the Iraqi capital this year.

A police colonel told AFP "at least 13 people were killed and 39 wounded in a car bomb facing a popular restaurant in the Karrada area".

Karrada is packed with shops and restaurants and would have been busy on Saturday night, which marks the end of the weekend in Iraq.

No one has so far claimed responsibility for the attack, which comes after a series of similar bombings in the capital.

Eleven people were killed and more than 40 wounded in a wave of car bomb attacks on Thursday and another nine were killed in two car bombings in Baghdad on Monday.

The Islamic State jihadist group claimed it had carried out those attacks on Shiite districts of Baghdad to avenge attacks on displaced persons from a Sunni province.

Since the start of April, 114,000 residents have fled fighting between government forces and IS in the Ramadi area of the western province of Anbar, which is largely controlled by the Sunni extremist group, according to UN figures.

Police say several of the displaced have been kidnapped and killed in Baghdad, including four victims found on April 25 with gunshot wounds to the head.

Despite the recent attacks, they have decreased sharply in number compared to the same period last year.

Bombings and shootings in Baghdad were once a daily occurrence, but have declined since Islamic State launched a major offensive last June, seizing control of vast areas north and west of the city.

That has tied them down in fighting outside Baghdad that distracts from their ability to carry out attacks inside the capital.

A curfew in operation for years in the Iraqi capital was lifted in February.

The Iraqi army has taken back some territory from the Islamists and in April, troops seized back control of the city of Tikrit, its biggest victory of the 11-month conflict.

But many other areas remain under IS control.


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The White House will next week host the head of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, a frontline ally in the fight against Islamic militants, a US official said Thursday. Massud Barzani will meet with both President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden only weeks after a landmark visit by new Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. Barzani's last visit to Washington dates back to April 2012. ... read more


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