Two car bombs in Baghdad scattered body parts and turned vehicles into burned-out shells, killing 26 in the latest in a wave of attacks targeting Shi'ite pilgrims.
The blasts struck the city's Shula and Kadimiyah neighborhoods Saturday, just a few kilometers from a shrine to revered Imam Moussa al-Kadhim, a great-grandson of the Prophet Muhammad.
Haider Ghareeb saw the explosions:
“When the pilgrims finish their visit they usually come to get a lift from this park where a number of cars are gathered. The blast took place here and when we we arrived we found scattered bodies. What was the reason? What did they do? They are only pilgrims.''
Mohamed Ali says he saw the blast in Shula:
“There is no real security, no real search. Today is an exceptional day – all security forces must be on high alert.”
Officials said at least 60 were injured.
Saturday was the final day of an annual Shi'ite Muslim religious commemoration, and the bombings were the latest in a series of deadly attacks in Iraq this past week.
Car bombings on Wednesday, at the start of the Shi'ite pilgrimage, killed 72 people and wounded nearly 260.
A group that monitors militant web sites – the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group – said Saturday the al-Qaida affiliate in Iraq claimed responsibility for the earlier attacks. SITE said the militant group praised the attacks as a “blessed Wednesday invasion” against the Iraqi government.