Relatives of Muiessar Anam, a victim of a suicide bombing, mourn before his funeral in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday. On Thursday, nearly 80 people were killed in two suicide bombings in the deadliest day in Iraq in more than a year.
Khalid Mohammed, Associated Press
BAGHDAD — Two suicide bombers killed 60 people outside a heavily guarded Shiite shrine in Baghdad on Friday, prompting Iraq's prime minister to order an investigation into security shortcomings that allowed the assailants to slip through.
Violence in Iraq has dropped to its lowest levels since the months following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, but an increase in suicide bombings and other devastating attacks in recent weeks has renewed concerns about the capabilities of Iraq's security forces.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki suspended the commanders who oversaw security in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Kazimiyah, where Friday's attack took place.
The bombers detonated explosive belts within minutes of each other near separate gates of the tomb of the Shiite saint Imam Mousa al-Kazim, said a police official. Another official said the bombers struck shortly before the start of Friday prayers as worshippers streamed into the mosque — an important site for Shiite pilgrims.
Laith Ali, 35, who owns a shop near the shrine, said security at the time of the bombing was high.
"We felt secure because security checks were going on at the main entrances to the shrine," he said, adding that both men and women were being checked.
The blasts left the dead — some of their bodies burned — scattered near the entrances, witnesses said. Hours later, pools of blood still streaked the sidewalks.
Among the dead were 25 Iranian pilgrims, said a police and a hospital official. Both said at least 125 people, including 80 Iranian pilgrims, were injured in the blast.
The U.S. military could not provide details, saying the area around the shrine was patrolled by Iraqi security forces.
All the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information.
Staff at the nearby Kazimiyah Teaching Hospital were overwhelmed trying to treat the injured. AP Television News footage showed many of the wounded — including women and children — were forced to wait outside the hospital before they could be seen by medical staff.
A day earlier, two suicide bombings in different parts of the country killed 88 people.
Iraq's leadership is trying to ensure that its security forces will be able to keep Iraqis safe as the United States prepares to withdraw its troops.
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