Two Sunni mosques bombed, muezzin killed in Iraq

An Iraqi policeman inspects on Monday the debris at the Sunni Ammar Bin Yasser mosque, that was one of two mosques bombed overnight, in Hilla, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) south the capital Baghdad.

An Iraqi policeman inspects on Monday the debris at the Sunni Ammar Bin Yasser mosque, that was one of two mosques bombed overnight, in Hilla, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) south the capital Baghdad.


Blasts rocked two Sunni mosques in central Iraq Monday, police and medics said.

Groups of men wearing military uniforms detonated explosives at two Sunni mosques overnight in the Hilla region, south of Baghdad, and a muezzin — the person appointed to recite the Muslim call to prayer — was shot dead near his home in Iskandariyah, the sources said.

In Hilla, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) from the capital, a police officer said the Ammar bin Yasser mosque in Bakerli neighborhood was bombed after midnight.

“After we heard the explosion, we went to its source and found that IEDs (improvised explosive devices) had been planted in the mosque,” the captain said.

“Residents said a group of people with military uniforms carried out this operation,” he said, adding that 10 houses were also damaged.

The Al-Fateh mosque in a village called Sinjar, just outside Hilla, was also damaged in similar circumstances.

The police captain said three or four men in military uniforms were involved that bombing.

“They took advantage of the cold weather, there was nobody outside,” he said.

A medical source in Hilla said three people were wounded in the explosions.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts, nor for the killing near the town of Iskandariyah, about 40 kilometers south of Baghdad.

A local councilor identified the slain muezzin of the Mohammed Abdallah Jabbouri mosque in Haswa as Taha Al-Juburi.

“He was ambushed by unknown gunmen near his house,” a source in Iskandariyah police said. A doctor also confirmed his death.

Iskandariyah is part of a mixed Sunni-Shiite area south of Baghdad which was once dubbed “the triangle of death” and was badly affected by sectarian violence last decade.

Pushing back the Daesh group in this region after the militants took over large parts of the country in 2014 was one of the priorities of the government.

That was achieved in a few months and Daesh has been largely eradicated from the area but violence — not just of a sectarian nature but also crime-driven — has remained frequent.

Iraq’s interior ministry condemned Monday’s attacks, which it said were an attempt to incite civil strife but did not blame on any particular group.

The attacks were “perpetrated by infiltrated elements who want to revive sectarian unrest.”


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