Bombers target churches in northern Iraq

02.08.2011, 15:02
A car bomb exploded near a Catholic Church in northern Iraq on Tuesday, injuring at least 16 people in part of a coordinated attack on Christian places of worship in the ethnically-mixed city of Kirkuk, a senior police official said, Reuters report.

A car bomb exploded near a Catholic Church in northern Iraq on Tuesday, injuring at least 16 people in part of a coordinated attack on Christian places of worship in the ethnically-mixed city of Kirkuk, a senior police official said, Reuters report.

Police also found car bombs near two other churches in Kirkuk, but defused them before they exploded, the city's Deputy Police Chief Major-Gen. Torhan Abdulrahman said.

The explosion blew out the windows in the Catholic church, used mostly by Syrian Christians, damaged the building and left it covered in debris, television footage showed. Outside lay the twisted black metal remains of the car bomb.

"It was a coordinated attack to target churches at the same time," Abdulrahman told Reuters, saying 16 people were injured.

Hospital sources said they treated 23 people wounded in the blast, including some Christians.

Violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of the 2006-2007 fighting between majority Shi'ites and once dominant Sunni Arabs, but bombings and shootings by insurgents and militias remain a daily occurrence.

Sectarian tensions continue to fester more than eight years after the U.S. invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.