Mon, Dec 15, 2003 - Page 6 News List

Car bomb in Iraq kills at least 17

CASUALTIES Shattered glass, shoes and pools of blood littered the street outside a police station in Khalidiyah where an explosion is believed to have wounded 33

REUTERS , KHALIDIYAH, IRAQ

A car bomb ripped through a police station west of Baghdad yesterday, killing at least 17 people, in the latest attack on the force central to Washington's plans to hand over power to Iraqis.

US troops on the scene said a suicide bomber may have been behind the blast. It left a thick cloud of black smoke rising into the sky over the restive village of Khalidiyah, 60km from the capital, around 8:40am.

Pools of blood, shattered glass and scattered shoes littered the street. A US officer said 17 were dead and 33 wounded. None were Americans or from allied foreign forces. An Iraqi police major put the toll at 16 dead and 32 hurt.

US troops and several Bradley armored vehicles and tanks stood off about 50m from station, with soldiers stepping in to break up a confrontation between Iraqi police and about 200 local demonstrators who chanted "Yes, Yes to Saddam."

The remains of a twisted car lay outside the two-story station. A stone wall around the structure appeared to have borne the brunt of the blast which destroyed parts of it.

US Lieutenant-Colonel Jeff Swisher told reporters at the scene that there was "some evidence" of a suicide bomber.

A US military spokesman in Baghdad said there were no casualties among US or foreign allied forces.

Ambulances and rescue workers ferried the casualties to a hospital in the town of Ramadi, 110km west of the capital. The area, dominated by Iraq's Sunni Muslim minority, is a focus of support for ousted president Saddam Hussein.

The bomb was the latest in a string of attacks on Iraqi police and other targets seen as cooperating with the US-led occupation. Scores of Iraqis have been killed.

US-led forces in Iraq have also come under daily attacks since the end of the war that toppled Saddam in April.

Several police targets have come under attack, including in Khalidiyah and Ramadi, before. The US-appointed police chief in Khalidiyah was killed in September.

The Iraqi police, trained by US forces, have often complained that they are not sufficiently armed or protected.

The police, along with a 40,000-strong new Iraqi army and security forces, are central to US plans to turn responsibility for security and formal sovereignty over to Iraqis by the middle of next year, ahead of the US presidential election.

The US military said on Saturday it would reconsider pay for the Iraqi army intended to replace Saddam's forces, after a wave of recruits quit in protest at low pay.

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