Car bomb kills 4 and hurts Iraqi minister
Bomber came from Syria, according to statement on Web
Iraqis comfort each other where a car bomb exploded in Baghdad, killing four people, in the second such attack this week.
Karim Kadim, Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq A suicide car bomber killed four people and slightly wounded a deputy interior minister on Saturday in the second such attack on a senior Iraqi official in Baghdad this week both claimed by the same al-Qaida-linked group.
A statement by the group posted on the Internet said the bomber Saturday came from Syria, bolstering long-standing U.S. claims that foreign fighters are involved in insurgent attacks in Iraq.
Fighting flared anew in the Shiite holy city of Najaf and nearby Kufa between American soldiers and the Shiite militia of Muqtada al-Sadr, with bursts of heavy mortar and machine gun fire heard about midnight. A live report on Al-Jazeera television from its correspondent in Najaf was punctuated by strong explosions near a downtown hotel.
More than 20 tanks and hundreds of soldiers moved into Kufa Saturday night after pounding the city with artillery, said CNN, which has a reporter accompanying the troops. It said the troops killed 16 suspected insurgents and seized a large cache of weapons at a mosque.
A U.S. patrol moved into the center of another Shiite holy city, Karbala, late Saturday but found no sign of al-Sadr's militia. Residents told the soldiers that the militiamen fled the area the night before.
Saturday's suicide blast outside the home of Abdul-Jabbar Youssef al-Sheikhli, the deputy interior minister in charge of security, hurled two cars onto the front lawn of his house. Police fired warning shots to disperse distraught bystanders who scuffled with them after the attack.
Al-Sheikhli was injured in the forehead and right arm, said Hassan Hadi, a Health Ministry official.
Bodyguards fired on the bomber's car as it approached, said Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the chief U.S. military spokesman in Iraq. Three bodyguards and a woman were killed as well as the bomber, he said. Earlier, Iraqi authorities said four police officers died.
Al-Sheikhli belongs to the Shiite Muslim Dawa party, which lost a prominent member in another fatal car bombing on Monday. The president of the Iraqi Governing Council, Dawa member Izzadine Saleem, was killed along with at least six other people near the headquarters of the U.S.-run coalition in the capital.
The Monotheism and Jihad Group, which claimed responsibility for Saleem's death, said it carried out the attack Saturday as a warning to the United States and its allies.
"They will not be safe from the hand of God's retaliation, then the mujahedeen's, and that they should be ready," said the statement, posted on an Islamic Web site.
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