Al Qaeda in Iraq claims TV office bombing

July 29 (Reuters) – The Iraqi arm of al Qaeda has claimed responsibility for a suicide attack this week on the Baghdad office of satellite television channel Al Arabiya, and warned of further strikes on media targets. “We assume responsibility for the attack on this corrupted channel,” the Islamic State of Iraq, an al Qaeda affiliate, said in a statement on an Islamist website.

The group said it would not hesitate to target media organisations and pursue their members “as long as they persist to be a tool in the war against Allah and His Messenger”.

On Monday, a suicide bomber killed at least four people in an attack on the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya news channel, security officials said. [ID:nLDE66P0CY]

Dubai-based Al Arabiya also said four people were killed, while an Iraqi interior ministry source put the death toll at six and said about 20 others were wounded.

(Reporting by Martina Fuchs, Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, July 25

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Iraq at 1815 GMT on Sunday.

* Denotes new or updated item

* BAGHDAD – Eight policemen and six civilians were wounded when two roadside bomb struck a police patrol in the Ghazaliya district of western Baghdad, an Interior Ministry source said.

* BAGHDAD – One policeman was killed and three wounded when two roadside bombs targeting an on foot patrol went off in the Doura district of southern Baghdad, an Interior Ministry source said.

MOSUL – A roadside bomb went off near a police patrol killing one policeman and wounding another and a child in western Mosul, 390 km (240 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.

MOSUL – A four-year-old child was killed by a stray bullet in northern Mosul, police said.

BAGHDAD – A sticky bomb attached to a car carrying an off-duty policeman killed him and wounded three people in Baghdad’s southern Saidiya district, an Interior Ministry source said.

BAGHDAD – Police said they found the body of a man buried in the garden of an Iraqi company in the Harithiya district of western Baghdad on Saturday.

BAGHDAD – A roadside bomb wounded two people in the Amil district of southwestern Baghdad on Saturday, an Interior Ministry source said.

(Compiled by Baghdad newsroom)

Taliban seize key district in Afghan east

KABUL, July 25 (Reuters) – Taliban guerrillas have captured a strategic district from the Afghan government after days of clashes in eastern Nuristan province, officials said on Sunday.

Separately, the Afghan government said it was checking reports by locals saying some 40 Afghan civilians were killed in a raid by foreign forces in Sangin district of southern Helmand province on Friday.

In Nuristan’s Barg-e Matal, dozens of Taliban fighters and up to six Afghan police were killed during days of clashes before the district fell to the Taliban overnight.

Barg-e Matal is important for the government and militants because of its location and has regularly changed hands.

Lying near the border with Pakistan, the rugged district has been used as a supply route for arms and fighters for the Taliban in three provinces, most importantly for Badakhshan where the Taliban have mounted a series of deadly attacks recently.

Afghan police forces withdrew from Barg-e Matal to avoid high casualties and in the face of sustained Taliban pressure after days of skirmishes, interior ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary told reporters.

“Right now the police forces in Nuristan are working to recapture it,” he said.

The Taliban have yet to comment about the fall of the district and the reported losses in their ranks.

In Helmand province, where the Taliban insurgency is strongest, Bashary said provincial authorities were checking reports by residents that dozens of civilians were killed in a raid by foreign forces on Friday.

Further details were not immediately available. (Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Sugita Katyal) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Afghan and NATO forces ready security for Kabul Conference

(Reuters) – Afghan and foreign forces are stepping up security in the Afghan capital for the biggest international conference in decades this week, where delegates will thrash out plans for handing more responsibility for the country to the government.

Over 60 envoys, among them some 40 foreign ministers and including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are expected to attend the conference on Tuesday, co-chaired by President Hamid Karzai and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

With violence at its worst levels since the Taliban were overthrown in late 2001, western diplomats are lauding the fact the conference is taking place in Kabul at all and the Afghan government is keen to see it run smoothly.

A major attack could be a disaster for the government and could score a valuable propaganda point for the insurgents.

While they say all necessary steps to thwart an assault on the day have been taken, both Afghan and NATO forces acknowledge they cannot be everywhere at once.

That message hit home on Sunday when in the latest spell of violence a suicide bomber killed two civilians and wounded several more, including a child, in a residential area in the capital, close to the U.S. embassy, the Interior Ministry said.

“We are 100 percent prepared but this doesn’t mean everything will go exactly to plan. We will try to do our best and we will also rely on the support of God,” said Zemarai Bashary, spokesman for the Interior Ministry which runs the police force.

PREPARE FOR ATTACK

NATO’s top civilian representative in Afghanistan said insurgents would try to launch an attack and no amount of security preparations could be infallible.

“We have to prepare ourselves for the fact that the insurgents are going to seek to disrupt this,” Mark Sedwill told reporters over the weekend.

“Nobody is going to offer a 100 percent guarantee, but they (security precautions) are very extensive and indeed intensive.”

Bashary said all police officers had been placed on “high alert” and had already taken up their positions in a “ring of steel” around the city. Policemen from other units such as the anti-narcotics police, would also be on standby, he said.

While Western forces are keen to point out the conference security plans have been drawn up by the Afghans, NATO said its troops would be out on the streets with their Afghan counterparts and would have a “quick reaction force” on standby.

NATO helicopters will also be circling over the city in a “show of force” to try and deter an attack, said Lieutenant Commander Katie Kendrick, a spokeswoman for NATO-led forces.

“NATO forces are also ready to assist the Afghan government with any other assets,” she said. Bashary said the ministry had not received any specific threats against the conference, but NATO forces said they had captured several militants inside the capital over the weekend who were planning to attack the meeting.

While not able to completely disrupt it, insurgents fired rockets and tried to stage a suicide attack on a peace “jirga,” or meeting, of tribal elders last month, while Karzai was addressing the gathering.

The attack was quickly suppressed but caused embarrassment for the government and led to the resignations of the interior minister and the head of the country’s intelligence service. Karzai will want to avoid a repeat of the incident.

(Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by David Fox)

Afghan, NATO forces ready security before Kabul Conference

July 18 (Reuters) – Afghan and foreign forces are stepping up security in the Afghan capital for the biggest international conference in decades this week, where delegates will thrash out plans for handing more responsibility for the country to the government. Over 60 envoys, among them some 40 foreign ministers and including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are expected to attend the conference on Tuesday, co-chaired by President Hamid Karzai and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

With violence at its worst levels since the Taliban were overthrown in late 2001, western diplomats are lauding the fact the conference is taking place in Kabul at all and the Afghan government is keen to see it run smoothly.

A major attack could be a disaster for the government and could score a valuable propaganda point for the insurgents.

While they say all necessary steps to thwart an assault on the day have been taken, both Afghan and NATO forces acknowledge they cannot be everywhere at once. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For Kabul Conference stories, see [ID:nKABCON]

For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK]

or see link.reuters.com/syx62d

Afghan blog: blogs.reuters.com/afghanistan/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

That message hit home on Sunday when in the latest spell of violence a suicide bomber killed two civilians and wounded several more, including a child, in a residential area in the capital, close to the U.S. embassy, the Interior Ministry said.

“We are 100 percent prepared but this doesn’t mean everything will go exactly to plan. We will try to do our best and we will also rely on the support of God,” said Zemarai Bashary, spokesman for the Interior Ministry which runs the police force.

PREPARE FOR ATTACK

NATO’s top civilian representative in Afghanistan said insurgents would try to launch an attack and no amount of security preparations could be infallible.

“We have to prepare ourselves for the fact that the insurgents are going to seek to disrupt this,” Mark Sedwill told reporters over the weekend.

“Nobody is going to offer a 100 percent guarantee, but they (security precautions) are very extensive and indeed intensive.”

Bashary said all police officers had been placed on “high alert” and had already taken up their positions in a “ring of steel” around the city. Policemen from other units such as the anti-narcotics police, would also be on standby, he said.

While Western forces are keen to point out the conference security plans have been drawn up by the Afghans, NATO said its troops would be out on the streets with their Afghan counterparts and would have a “quick reaction force” on standby.

NATO helicopters will also be circling over the city in a “show of force” to try and deter an attack, said Lieutenant Commander Katie Kendrick, a spokeswoman for NATO-led forces.

“NATO forces are also ready to assist the Afghan government with any other assets,” she said. Bashary said the ministry had not received any specific threats against the conference, but NATO forces said they had captured several militants inside the capital over the weekend who were planning to attack the meeting.

While not able to completely disrupt it, insurgents fired rockets and tried to stage a suicide attack on a peace “jirga”, or meeting, of tribal elders last month, while Karzai was addressing the gathering.

The attack was quickly suppressed but caused embarrassment for the government and led to the resignations of the interior minister and the head of the country’s intelligence service. Karzai will want to avoid a repeat of the incident. (Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by David Fox) (jonathon.burch@thomsonreuters.com; +93 794 354 074; Reuters Messaging: jonathon.burch.reuters.com@reuters.net) (If you have a query or comment on this story, send an email to newsfeedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, July 18

July 18 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan reported at 1000 GMT on Sunday.

KABUL – A suicide bomb blast aimed at a convoy of foreign forces killed four Afghan civilians in a crowded part of the capital on Sunday, a police source said. There was no immediate word about casualties among the troops.

KANDAHAR – A roadside bomb killed a police officer and an Afghan civilian in the southern city of Kandahar on Sunday, an official said.

FARAH – Taliban guerrillas staged a series of attacks on police posts before blowing up the gate of a main prison in western Farah’s town on Sunday, an official said. Twenty-three inmates initially managed to escape, but some were rearrested, he said.

FARAH – Afghan police killed a would-be suicide bomber before he could ram a car laden with explosives against a convoy of Afghan police in an area of Farah on Saturday, the interior ministry said.

BAGHLAN – Afghan and foreign forces killed five insurgents during an operation on Friday to the north of Pul-i-Khumri, the provincial capital of northern Baghlan, the ministry said.

ZABUL – Taliban guerrillas killed four police in an attack in an area of southern Zabul province on Friday, the ministry said separately.

(Compiled by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

(sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285))

If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Yemen accuses rebels of kidnapping oil workers

July 10 (Reuters) – Yemen accused Shi’ite rebels on Saturday of kidnapping five oil workers this week and said it had foiled an attempt to blow up an oil pipeline.

Yemen is struggling to curb a separatist movement in the south and cement a ceasefire with Shi’ite rebels in the north, and is under pressure to combat a resurgent al Qaeda wing.

The Interior Ministry said that five employees of a state oil company were kidnapped by the rebels on Thursday.

“The Houthis captured five staff from an oil company in Marib along with their car when they were inspecting fuel stations in the directorate of Barat in al-Jouf province,” it said in a statement.

“The security forces … are using all measures to ensure their release.”

A Houthi source denied any link to the incident, saying the kidnap was a result of a tribal dispute.

In a separate statement, the government said security forces had foiled an attempt to sabotage an oil pipeline in Marib in the northeast of the country. The pipeline is used to transport oil to ports on the Red Sea.

It said that “unknown people” were forced to flee by security guards during the incident. (Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Jason Benham; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, July 5

July 5 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan at 0630 GMT on Monday.

HELMAND – Explosives hidden in a bazaar killed four Afghan civilians and wounded four more on Sunday in an area of southern Helmand province, the interior ministry said on Monday.

ZABUL – Two separate roadside bombs killed seven Afghan civilians and wounded four others in southern Zabul province on Sunday, the ministry said.

SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN – An explosion killed a soldier of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) force on Sunday in an area of southern Afghanistan, the ISAF said in a statement. (Compiled by Sayed Salahuddin, Editing by Rob Taylor)

Police and protesters clash in Bangladesh general strike

(Reuters) – Bangladesh police on Sunday used tear-gas and batons to disperse thousands of anti-government protesters in the first general strike in over three years, which the opposition hopes can force early elections.

World

The strike, called by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami, halted public transport and kept most businesses shut across the impoverished country, which economists estimated could lose an overall $250 million from the stoppage.

Government offices and banks, however, remained open but with less staff than usual. The stock markets of Dhaka and Chittagong were also trading as usual and the country’s main ports were still handling cargo, officials said.

The opposition parties said the strike, in which some two dozen people were injured, was intended to draw public attention to the government’s “failures and excesses” and to give impetus to their demands for a mid-term election. Bangladesh is due to hold parliamentary elections in 2013.

Police detained around 150 activists, including several senior BNP leaders, for inciting the unrest and leading marches during the strike, during which protesters hurled bricks at the security forces and set vehicles ablaze.

The interior ministry said around 10,000 riot police and other forces were deployed in the capital Dhaka.

BATTLING BEGUMS

Sunday’s general strike was the first large-scale challenge by the BNP, led by Begum Khaleda Zia, to her rival Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina who took office in January 2009.

It was also the first strike since January 2007, when an army-backed interim government took power, ending months of political unrest.

BNP secretary general Khandaker Delwar Hossain said the strike was a show of the “people’s lack of confidence in the government.”

A day earlier, Hasina dismissed the strike, saying it was aimed at creating anarchy.

“The BNP and its stooges are out to frustrate democracy and create anarchy. But people who gave us a huge mandate in 2008 elections will foil all evil designs,” she said on Saturday.

Political analysts said the strike was the latest manifestation of the long-running discord between Hasina and Khaleda, known as the “battling begums” and who have rotated the leadership of their country since 1991. “Begum” is an honorific term for lady in Bangladesh.

The opposition accuses the government of being unable to deliver on promises that include cracking down on corruption, improving power and gas supplies, attracting investment and keeping spiraling food prices in check.

They are also angry that the government last month banned the publication of a pro-opposition daily newspaper and arrested its editor on charges of sedition and maligning the government as well as Hasina’s family.

The government says it is too early to assess its performance.

(Additional reporting by Ruma Paul)

(Editing by Miral Fahmy)

Police, protesters clash in Bangladesh general strike

DHAKA, June 27 (Reuters) – Bangladesh police on Sunday used tear-gas and batons to disperse thousands of anti-government protesters in the first general strike in over three years, which the opposition hopes can force early elections.

The strike, called by the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its ally Jamaat-e-Islami, halted public transport and kept most businesses shut across the impoverished country, which economists estimated could lose an overall $250 million from the stoppage.

Government offices and banks, however, remained open but with less staff than usual. The stock markets of Dhaka and Chittagong were also trading as usual and the country’s main ports were still handling cargo, officials said.

The opposition parties said the strike, in which some two dozen people were injured, was intended to draw public attention to the government’s “failures and excesses” and to give impetus to their demands for a mid-term election. Bangladesh is due to hold parliamentary elections in 2013.

Police detained around 150 activists, including several senior BNP leaders, for inciting the unrest and leading marches during the strike, during which protesters hurled bricks at the security forces and set vehicles ablaze.

The interior ministry said around 10,000 riot police and other forces were deployed in the capital Dhaka.

BATTLING BEGUMS

Sunday’s general strike was the first large-scale challenge by the BNP, led by Begum Khaleda Zia, to her rival Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina who took office in January 2009.

It was also the first strike since January 2007, when an army-backed interim government took power, ending months of political unrest.

BNP secretary general Khandaker Delwar Hossain said the strike was a show of the “people’s lack of confidence in the government”.

A day earlier, Hasina dismissed the strike, saying it was aimed at creating anarchy.

“The BNP and its stooges are out to frustrate democracy and create anarchy. But people who gave us a huge mandate in 2008 elections will foil all evil designs,” she said on Saturday.

Political analysts said the strike was the latest manifestation of the long-running discord between Hasina and Khaleda, known as the “battling begums” and who have rotated the leadership of their country since 1991. “Begum” is an honorific term for lady in Bangladesh.

The opposition accuses the government of being unable to deliver on promises that include cracking down on corruption, improving power and gas supplies, attracting investment and keeping spiralling food prices in check.

They are also angry that the government last month banned the publication of a pro-opposition daily newspaper and arrested its editor on charges of sedition and maligning the government as well as Hasina’s family.

The government says it is too early to assess its performance.

(Additional reporting by Ruma Paul)

(Editing by Miral Fahmy)

Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KUNAR – A female suicide bomber wounded 18 people including three police officers in an attack on a police check post in the Shigal district of eastern Kunar province on Monday, the Interior Ministry said.

* HELMAND – Three would-be-suicide bombers were killed when their suicide vests went off in the Marjah town of southern Helmand province on Monday, Interior Ministry said.

* HERAT – Five civilians were killed and three wounded when their car was hit by a roadside bomb in western Herat province on Monday, said Abdul Rahoof, a local police official.

SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN – A member of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) died of wounds sustained in an insurgent attack in southern Afghanistan on Monday, the alliance said in a statement.

HELMAND – ISAF and Afghan troops seized 1,650 kg (3,637 lb) of opium and 10 kg of heroin during a vehicle search in southern Helmand province, detaining two passengers, the alliance said in a statement. Separately, an ISAF patrol found 1,630 kg of opium in an abandoned vehicle.

(1 kg = 2.2 pounds)

(Compiled by Dan Williams; Editing by David Fox and Sanjeev Miglani)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Iraq, June 20

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Iraq at 1230 GMT on Sunday.

BAGHDAD – Suicide car bombers attacked the Trade Bank of Iraq, killing at least 26 people and wounded 53 in central Baghdad, an Interior Ministry source said.

BAGHDAD – Police on Saturday found the decomposing bodies of six women and two men in a suspected brothel in eastern Baghdad, Iraqi police sources said on Sunday.

KIRKUK – Police found the body of an off-duty Iraqi soldier inside his car in southern Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.

(Compiled by Baghdad newsroom)

Toll from bank bombing in Iraqi capital reaches 26

June 20 (Reuters) – The toll from twin bomb blasts at the Trade Bank of Iraq in Baghdad on Sunday rose to 26 dead with 53 people wounded, police and an Interior Ministry source said.

The bombings occurred a week after an assault by suicide bombers on Iraq’s Central Bank in which 18 people died, highlighting fears of increasing violence as militants try to exploit a political vacuum after a March election that produced no clear winner and no new government so far.

Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi said the attack on the Trade Bank involved two suicide bombers in cars, who drove at the main gate of the bank and blew up when they struck blastwalls. Moussawi put the death toll at 18. (Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Michael Christie; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Six dead in blast at private bank in Iraqi capital

June 20 (Reuters) – Twin car bombs exploded in a car park of a private bank in central Baghdad on Sunday, killing at least six people and wounding 42, sources in the police and the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.

The building housing the bank was heavily damaged in the blasts and two of the dead were police officers guarding a nearby Interior Ministry office that issues Iraqi ID cards, the ministry sources said. (Writing by Michael Christie; Editing by Matthew Jones)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, June 20

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan reported at 0800 GMT on Sunday.

BADGHIS – More than 30 Afghan civilians were wounded during a clash between a group of pro-government militia and Taliban insurgents in northwestern Badghis province on Sunday. Three insurgents and a militia member were killed in the encounter, said Sharafuddin Majedi, a spokesman for the provincial governor.

HELMAND – Three Afghan civilians were killed and more than 20 wounded on Sunday in two separate blasts in Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of southern Helmand, a provincial official said.

NANGARHAR – A rocket hit a residential area, killing two chidren and wounding four in eastern Nangarhar province overnight, the interior ministry said on Sunday.

HELMAND – A roadside bomb killed two civilians in Helmand on Saturday, the interior ministry said. (Compiled by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

CORRECTED-FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, June 15

(Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan reported at 1600 GMT on Tuesday (* denotes new or updated items):

KANDAHAR – A district chief and two other passengers were killed when their car was struck by an explosive device on Tuesday, the governor’s spokesman said.

* SOUTHERN AFGHANISTAN – Two NATO-led service members were killed in separate insurgent attacks in the south of the country, the alliance said. EASTERN AFGHANISTAN – Two NATO-led service members were killed in separate insurgent attacks in the east of the country, the alliance said.

MAIDAN WARDAK – Four policemen were killed when their vehicle was struck by an explosive device on Monday in Maidan Wardak, west of Kabul, the Interior Ministry said.

GHAZNI – Taliban insurgents attacked an Afghan police post and killed five officers on Tuesday in Ghazni, southwest of Kabul, a provincial official said.

NANGARHAR – Five insurgents were killed on Monday in a clash with Afghan police and foreign troops in eastern Nangarhar province, the interior ministry said on Tuesday.

The clash erupted after the militants ambushed a convoy, it said, adding two Afghan police were also killed.

KAPISA – Afghan and foreign troops killed several insurgents overnight in Kapisa to the northeast of Kabul, the NATO-led force said on Tuesday.

HERAT – A roadside bomb killed two civilians in an area of western Herat on Monday, a provincial official said. (Compiled by Kabul Newsroom; Editing by David Fox)

Gunmen, bombs target Iraq central bank

(Reuters) – Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded Sunday when suicide bombers detonated at least one bomb at Iraq’s central bank and gunmen battled troops in what officials said may have been a raid on the vaults.

World

The attack occurred as bank employees were leaving work, sending a thick plume of smoke over Baghdad after the bank’s generator was set ablaze.

Security sources gave conflicting accounts of what actually happened, and some said the attackers had been disguised in military uniforms — a tactic not uncommon in Iraq.

Soldiers and police locked down Baghdad’s main arteries, with the capital on high alert for the first session of Iraq’s new parliament Monday after a March election that has yet to yield a government.

Troops came under fire from gunmen as they surrounded the bank in case the initial bombing was part of a plan to plunder stockpiles of Iraqi dinars and U.S. dollars, said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi.

“It’s not clear to us whether this was a robbery or an attempt to cause destruction,” said Moussawi. “But we can definitely say they targeted the central bank.”

Interior Ministry sources said 15 people were killed and 45 wounded. Moussawi told state television there were also four suicide bombers and three gunmen, all of whom were killed. One Interior Ministry source said dozens of attackers in military uniforms were involved and most escaped.

A central bank official, who asked not to be identified, said security forces had ordered all employees and civilians to stay inside while helicopters hovered over the site.

“The security forces warned us that if anyone moves, they will shoot them,” the official said. “They let us out after they checked our badges.”

“This was a robbery,” he said.

RECENT ROBBERIES

Recent weeks have seen a spurt of deadly gold market robberies and attacks by suspected Sunni Islamist insurgents as tensions simmer following the inconclusive March election.

Many of the groups that took up arms after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein have turned to crime as the sectarian war and al Qaeda-led insurgency fade. Gunmen killed 14 people on May 25 in a raid on Baghdad goldsmiths and three on June 9 in an attack on a gold market in southern Basra.

The attackers did not gain entry to the central bank’s main building but were driven to the rooftops of neighboring buildings within its fortified compound, the bank official said.

Overall violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006/07. But Sunni Islamist insurgents have sought to exploit the political uncertainty that followed the March 7 election through bombings and assassinations.

The number of civilians killed in violence each month has climbed slowly but steadily since the March vote.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily backed by the once dominant Sunni minority won the most seats, but the main Shi’ite factions have agreed to form the largest unified bloc in parliament, potentially giving them the muscle to claim the right to form a government.

It is likely to still take weeks if not months for a deal on a government, potentially leaving Iraq rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full troop withdrawal by the end of 2011.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Michael Christie and Matthew Robinson; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Egypt protestors, police clash after activist’s death

(Reuters) – Egyptian opposition groups clashed with security forces Sunday after rights groups accused undercover officers of beating to death an activist who had attempted to expose police corruption.

World

Police have denied any role in the death of Khaled Mohammed Said, 28, who the Interior Ministry said Saturday died from an overdose of drugs he swallowed before police approached him.

Some 200 protestors chanting anti-government slogans, were quickly surrounded in Lazougli Square near the Interior Ministry in downtown Cairo, a Reuters witness said.

“Khaled was murdered and Adly is responsible,” protestors chanted, calling for Egyptian Interior Minister Habib el-Adly to be held accountable for Said’s death.

The violence began when demonstrators tried to break through a police cordon. A security official said 32 protestors were detained.

“We are here protesting the loss of the martyr of the emergency law,” said Ahmad Raghab, head of the Hisham Mubarak Law Center, referring to an Egyptian law that allows indefinite detention and curbs anti-government political activity.

“We demand that those responsible for his death are tried.”

Egypt last month extended until 2011 an emergency law that gives police wide-ranging powers including indefinite detentions without charge and limiting the freedom of public assembly to no more than five people.

The measure has been extended regularly since it was passed in 1981, but authorities say they have now limited its scope to terrorism and drug cases. Activists and analysts say the law is used to crush dissent.

According to activists and human rights groups, Said was killed in the port city of Alexandria on June 6 after he posted an internet video which Said’s family said showed police officers sharing the profits of a drug deal.

The El-Nadeem Center, a rights group following the case, said undercover policemen confronted Said in an internet cafe, dragged him onto the street and beat him to death. Social networking sites posted images of his beaten face and body.

Egypt’s attorney general has ordered an autopsy and referred the investigation into Said’s death to Alexandria’s appeals court. Rights group Amnesty International has called for an independent investigation into Said’s death.

(Additional reporting by Dina Zayed; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz)

Egypt protestors, police clash after activist’s death

CAIRO, June 13 (Reuters) – Egyptian opposition groups clashed with security forces on Sunday after rights groups accused undercover officers of beating to death an activist who had attempted to expose police corruption.

Police have denied any role in the death of Khaled Mohammed Said, 28, who the Interior Ministry said on Saturday died from an overdose of drugs he swallowed before police approached him.

Some 200 protestors chanting anti-government slogans, were quickly surrounded in Lazougli Square near the Interior Ministry in downtown Cairo, a Reuters witness said.

“Khaled was murdered and Adly is responsible,” protestors chanted, calling for Egyptian Interior Minister Habib el-Adly to be held accountable for Said’s death.

The violence began when demonstrators tried to break through a police cordon. A security official said 32 protestors were detained.

“We are here protesting the loss of the martyr of the emergency law,” said Ahmad Raghab, head of the Hisham Mubarak Law Center, referring to an Egyptian law that allows indefinite detention and curbs anti-government political activity.

“We demand that those responsible for his death are tried.”

Egypt last month extended until 2011 an emergency law that gives police wide-ranging powers including indefinite detentions without charge and limiting the freedom of public assembly to no more than five people.

The measure has been extended regularly since it was passed in 1981, but authorities say they have now limited its scope to terrorism and drug cases. Activists and analysts say the law is used to crush dissent.

According to activists and human rights groups, Said was killed in the port city of Alexandria on June 6 after he posted an internet video which Said’s family said showed police officers sharing the profits of a drug deal.

The El-Nadeem Centre, a rights group following the case, said undercover policemen confronted Said in an internet cafe, dragged him onto the street and beat him to death. Social networking sites posted images of his beaten face and body.

Egypt’s attorney general has ordered an autopsy and referred the investigation into Said’s death to Alexandria’s appeals court. Rights group Amnesty International has called for an independent investigation into Said’s death. (Additional reporting by Dina Zayed; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz)

Gunmen, bombs target Iraq central bank, killing 15

(Reuters) – Fifteen people were killed and dozens wounded Sunday when suicide bombers detonated at least one bomb at Iraq’s central bank and gunmen battled troops in what officials said may have been a raid on the vaults.

World

The attack occurred as bank employees were leaving work, sending a thick plume of smoke over Baghdad after the bank’s generator was set ablaze.

Security sources gave conflicting accounts of what actually happened, and some said the attackers had been disguised in military uniforms — a tactic not uncommon in Iraq.

Soldiers and police locked down Baghdad’s main arteries, with the capital on high alert for the first session of Iraq’s new parliament Monday after a March election that has yet to yield a government.

Troops came under fire from gunmen as they surrounded the bank in case the initial bombing was part of a plan to plunder stockpiles of Iraqi dinars and U.S. dollars, said Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi.

“It’s not clear to us whether this was a robbery or an attempt to cause destruction,” said Moussawi. “But we can definitely say they targeted the central bank.”

Interior Ministry sources said 15 people were killed and 45 wounded. Moussawi told state television there were also four suicide bombers and three gunmen, all of whom were killed. One Interior Ministry source said dozens of attackers in military uniforms were involved and most escaped.

A central bank official, who asked not to be identified, said security forces had ordered all employees and civilians to stay inside while helicopters hovered over the site.

“The security forces warned us that if anyone moves, they will shoot them,” the official said. “They let us out after they checked our badges.”

“This was a robbery,” he said.

RECENT ROBBERIES

Recent weeks have seen a spurt of deadly gold market robberies and attacks by suspected Sunni Islamist insurgents as tensions simmer following the inconclusive March election.

Many of the groups that took up arms after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein have turned to crime as the sectarian war and al Qaeda-led insurgency fade. Gunmen killed 14 people on May 25 in a raid on Baghdad goldsmiths and three on June 9 in an attack on a gold market in southern Basra.

The attackers did not gain entry to the central bank’s main building but were driven to the rooftops of neighboring buildings within its fortified compound, the bank official said.

Overall violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian bloodshed in 2006/07. But Sunni Islamist insurgents have sought to exploit the political uncertainty that followed the March 7 election through bombings and assassinations.

The number of civilians killed in violence each month has climbed slowly but steadily since the March vote.

A cross-sectarian alliance heavily backed by the once dominant Sunni minority won the most seats, but the main Shi’ite factions have agreed to form the largest unified bloc in parliament, potentially giving them the muscle to claim the right to form a government.

It is likely to still take weeks if not months for a deal on a government, potentially leaving Iraq rudderless as the U.S. military ends combat operations in August ahead of a full troop withdrawal by the end of 2011.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Michael Christie and Matthew Robinson; Editing by Matthew Jones)