A truck bomb ripped through a market in a Shi'ite-majority area of
north Baghdad on Thursday, killing at least 33 people, security and
medical officials said.
The early morning blast in a wholesale
vegetable market in the Sadr City area, one of the deadliest single
attacks to hit the Iraqi capital in months, also wounded at least 74
people, the officials said.
The bomb went off at around 06:00, peak time for shops buying vegetables for the day.
Medics collected human remains at the scene of the blast, an AFP photographer said.
The
bombing devastated the market, killing horses used to transport
vegetables, burning vehicles and leaving produce strewn in the street.
There
was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but the
Islamic State jihadist group frequently targets Shi’ites, whom it
considers to be heretics.
In a bid to cause maximum casualties, the jihadists often strike areas such as markets and cafes where crowds of people gather.
IS
overran large parts of Iraq in June 2014, and Iraqi forces are battling
to drive the jihadists back with support from a US-led coalition and
Iran.
Even before the ISIS offensive, bombings targeting civilians in Iraq were a major threat.
The Baghdad blast came two days after bombings in Diyala province, northeast of the capital, killed more than 30 people.
A
massive suicide attack in the province killed more than 120 last month,
one of the deadliest single bombings in Iraq since the 2003 US-led
invasion.
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