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Sunni Bloc Pulls Out Of Coalition Talks Over Violence


Shi'ites in Baghdad protest against the bombing of the Golden Mosque, 23 February (epa) 23 February 2006 -- Iraq's main Sunni Muslim bloc has pulled out of talks on forming a new government, blaming Shi'ites for a wave of sectarian violence after a Shi'ite shrine was bombed on 22 February.


Reports say scores of people have been killed in Iraq in separate incidents since the bombing in Samarra sparked a wave of suspected reprisal attacks around the country.


A bomb exploded in Ba'qubah, northeast of Baghdad, killing at least 12 people, eight of them soldiers.


Authorities said the bullet-riddled corpses of at least 47 Iraqis were recovered from a ditch near Baghdad. The motive for the attack was unclear. Reuters news agency reports that the victims included both Sunnis and Shi'ites.


(compiled from agency reports)

Reactions To The Samarra Attack

Reactions To The Samarra Attack
Demonstrators in Baghdad on February 23 (epa)

Iraqi religious and government leaders, as well as international officials, condemned the February 22 bomb attack that wrecked the Golden Mosque, a major Shi'ite Muslim shrine in Samarra. Below is a selection of statements on the incident.


"This new ugly crime comes as a warning that there is a conspiracy against the Iraqi people to spark a war among brothers. God willing, we will not allow this.... We must cooperate and work together against this danger, the danger of civil war. This is the fiercest danger because it threatens our unity and our country with a devastating civil war." -- Iraqi President Jalal Talabani


"The timing of this crime indicates that one of its aims is to stall the political process and to hamper the negotiations on the formation of a national-unity government." -- President Talabani


"I announce on this occasion three days of mourning. I hope our heroic people will take more care on this occasion to bolster Islamic unity and protect Islamic brotherhood and Iraqi national brotherhood." -- Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Ja'fari


"Oh honorable people of Samarra! We should stand as one, united in confronting terrorism.... This assault is an assault on all Muslims." -- Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabur


"They will fail to draw the Iraqi people into civil war as they have failed in the past." -- Iraqi National Security Adviser Muwaffaq al-Rubay'i


"If the security systems are unable to secure necessary protection, the believers are able to do so with the might of God." -- Shi'ite spiritual leader Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani


"We will not only condemn and protest but we will act against those militants. If the Iraqi government does not do its job to defend the Iraqi people we are ready to do so." -- Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, speaking through spokesman Abdel Hadi al-Darajee

(compiled by Reuters)

For more reactions, click here and here.


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