Anti-Shia bomb attack in Baghdad kills 22

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A suicide attacker blew up a bomb-packed car at a Shia religious foundation’s headquarters in Baghdad on Monday, killing at least 22 people in the Iraqi capital’s deadliest blast in more than four months.
Shortly after the attack, at least one blast struck near a Sunni foundation’s headquarters in the capital, leaving no casualties, amid a dispute between the two endowments which manage Iraq’s religious landmarks over a shrine north of Baghdad.
The violence also comes during a protracted political standoff that has raised sectarian tensions in a country racked by brutal communal bloodshed from 2006 to 2008.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi both issued condemnations of the violence and appealed for calm.
Monday’s first attack struck at 11:00 am (0800 GMT) outside the Shia endowment in Baab al-Muadham, central Baghdad, and left at least 22 people dead and more than 65 wounded, two medical officials said.
The bombing completely destroyed the endowment headquarters, its deputy chief, Sami al-Massudi, told AFP. He said the Shia endowment had received threats in recent days as a result of the dispute over the Al-Askari shrine, a Shia Muslim site in the mostly Sunni city of Samarra, north of Baghdad.
The iconic gold-domed shrine was hit by a brutal Al-Qaeda suicide attack in February 2006 that ignited the country’s bloody confessional violence. AFP journalists near the site of the attack said security forces cordoned off the scene and barred anyone from approaching, while emergency workers searched for survivors in the remains of the endowment headquarters. Several cars and nearby buildings were badly damaged by the explosion, and helicopters were hovering overhead. One man threw his spectacles to the ground and yelled: “They are all dead! They are all dead!” Later on Monday, the spokesman of the Sunni endowment told AFP that two mortars struck its headquarters in Adhamiyah, north Baghdad, while an interior ministry official said it was a roadside bomb that exploded near the building. The attack left no casualties, both said. “We reject and condemn this criminal, cowardly, fanatical attack,” Sunni endowment spokesman Faris al-Mehdawi said, referring to the attack against the Shia endowment. “These attacks aim to create divisions between the Iraqi people,” he said. “There are dirty hands that are playing on sectarianism, and trying to bring the country back to the years of violence.”
The spike in attacks coincides with a ratcheting up of months-long tensions in which several political parties have called for the prime minister to be unseated. The latest violence comes less than a week after a spate of bombings in Baghdad left 17 dead on May 31, shattering a relative calm in the city.
Monday’s death toll was the highest from a single attack in Baghdad since a suicide car bomb outside a hospital killed 31 people on January 27.