2 car bombs kill 18 in Baghdad street
Dozens injured in attack; al-Qaida takes credit
A wounded man is helped at the scene after a pair of car bombs exploded near government offices in Baghdad Thursday.
Hadi Mizban, Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq First came the blasts. Then came the shooting.
With sirens blaring and thick, black smoke billowing over the capital, panicked students from a nearby school and university gathered on the crowded street lined with bodies Thursday. Some wept and shouted that they weren't going to attend classes anymore.
"We are terrified," said Hoda Raheem Hadi, a 22-year-old computer science student. "Why is this happening?"
It was the bloodiest attack in Iraq in more than a month: Two car bombs exploded in front of the Interior Ministry in central Baghdad, killing 18 people and wounding three dozen others.
Al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for the bombings. In a statement posted on the Internet, the group, headed by Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, said the attack targeted a patrol outside the office of Interior Minister Falah al-Naqib, who is in charge of the nation's police. The claim could not be independently verified.
Al-Naqib was in his office at the time of the explosions but was not injured. He came out afterward to examine the scorched road and blackened rubble left by the blast. The ministry building, built by Saddam Hussein's government to survive major attacks, was not damaged.
The force of the blast threw people to the ground.
Ali Ahmed, 28, said he was selling ice cream when he heard an explosion, followed by gunfire and another explosion.
"My stall was partially destroyed because of this terrorist act," he said. "Some people have lost their lives. As for me, I have now lost my source of income."
Abdullah Hussein Zamel was cleaning tables at a restaurant near the heavily fortified Green Zone when the blast shattered the windows.
"I went outside and saw dead and injured people," he said. "After that, I heard police open heavy fire on a second car."
After clearing the area, U.S. forces set off a third car bomb that apparently failed to explode earlier. Nobody was injured in that blast.
Interior Ministry official Capt. Ahmed Ismael said the first two blasts killed 18 people and wounded 36.
Meanwhile, a new video broadcast on al-Jazeera television showed a man who identified himself as a Pakistani diplomat kidnapped last weekend in Baghdad. The Arab satellite station said the man, who was wearing a white skull cap, urged the Pakistani government and international community to intervene and secure his release.
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