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Iraq political rally bombings kill 33

Two bombings have struck a Shi'ite political rally in the Iraqi capital, killing 33 people, ahead of parliamentary elections.

Mourners carrying a coffin of a victim killed in a car bomb in Najaf
Two car bombs at an election rally in Baghdad for a Shiite political party have killed 10 people. (AAP)

The death toll from twin jihadist bombings that struck a Shi'ite political rally in the Iraqi capital has risen to 33, officials said Saturday.

Friday's attack by a Sunni militant group came at the height of campaigning ahead of Wednesday's parliamentary election, the first since US troops withdrew in late 2011 and with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki seeking re-election amid the country's worst violence since a brutal Sunni-Shi'ite sectarian war.

A car bomb followed by a suicide attack hit the rally for the Sadiqun bloc, the political wing of the Asaib Ahel al-Haq (League of the Righteous) militia, killing 33 people and leaving more than 100 wounded, security and medical officials said.

Officials had said earlier that 28 people died.

The League of the Righteous, a Shi'ite militia blamed in the past for killing US soldiers and kidnapping Britons, has been linked to groups fighting mostly Sunni rebels in Syria, whose civil war has split the Middle East's sectarian communities, particularly in multi-confessional Iraq.

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The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant claimed the attack, saying it was to avenge the League's involvement in neighbouring Syria.

ISIL, itself fighting in Syria, made the claim in a statement on jihadist forums hours after the attack.

The attack was "in revenge for what the Safavid militias are doing in Iraq and Sham (the Levant), killing and torturing and displacing Sunnis," it said.

It used a pejorative term for Iraq's Shi'ite majority, linking it to the Safavid empire that once ruled neighbouring, predominantly Shi'ite Iran.

Iraq heads to the polls on Wednesday with little sign of any respite in the bloodshed, and the country still looking to rebuild after decades of conflict and sanctions.

A number of Shi'ite blocs are vying with Maliki for votes in his traditional heartland of central and southern Iraq.

They include Sadiqun but also the Ahrar movement, which is linked to powerful cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, and the Citizens bloc, a formerly powerful political group seen as close to Iran.


2 min read

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Source: AAP



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