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Iraq officials admit confusion over children killed
28 Feb 2007 07:23:13 GMT
Source: Reuters

BAGHDAD, Feb 28 (Reuters) - A report of a bomb killing 18 people, mostly children, on Tuesday in the Iraqi city of Ramadi was wrong and stemmed from confusion over a similar attack the day before, police officials and residents said on Wednesday.

The reported killing of so many children drew swift condemnation from the president and the prime minister, but Colonel Tariq al Theibani, security adviser for Anbar province, said the report of the bombing on Tuesday was wrong.

"It happened the day before yesterday," he told Reuters.

He said 18 people, many of them children, were killed on Monday by a suicide car bomb, as previously reported. The U.S. military had put the death toll from that attack at 15.

Iraq's government and police had reported on Tuesday another bomb near a soccer field killing 18 people, mostly children. The U.S. military, which has a heavy presence in Anbar, had said it was unaware of such an attack.

But the U.S. military said its soldiers had carried out a controlled explosion in the volatile western city, also near a soccer field, that wounded 30 people, including nine children on Tuesday afternoon.

Theibani said the confusion may have arisen partly because the victims of Monday's car bomb were buried on Tuesday.

The loud blast from Tuesday's controlled explosion near a soccer field may have also contributed to the confusion.

The U.S. military often carries out controlled explosions in Iraq to destroy captured weapons or unexploded bombs.

Other police sources in Ramadi and residents also confirmed that the report of the death of children in a blast on Tuesday was wrong, and said there were no major attacks that day in Ramadi.

According to a U.S. statement, in Monday's attack insurgents killed 15 Iraqis including women, children and two police officers in a car bomb near a mosque in a residential neighbourhood in northwestern Ramadi.

Theibani blamed Monday's attack on al Qaeda.
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A pilgrim bound for Kerbala carries a Shi'ite flag in Hilla, about 100 km (60 miles) south of Baghdad, March 7, 2007. More than a million Shi'ite Muslim pilgrims poured into Iraq's holy city of Kerbala on Wednesday, defying insurgents who killed 155 people in two days in attacks blamed by the government on Sunni militants.