A car bomb ripped through a crowd in Baghdad on Thursday, killing at least 20 people, including women and children, a day after the US military said violence in Iraq was at its lowest in six years. The blast occurred near a market in the capitals Shaab neighbourhood, defence and interior ministry officials said, with a further 38 people wounded. Eyewitnesses described a scene of charred bodies and burnt-out vehicles.
Four children and three women were among those killed, according to officials at two local hospitals. "I tried to escape and the fire was everywhere," said Umm Hatam, 45, who was heading home with groceries when the shock wave from the bomb knocked her off her feet. "I saw the dead bodies of women and children, and about 10 small buses were burned," she said.
Karim Ibrahim, 40, an oil ministry worker, said "a large flame rose from the explosion, then I just found myself in the hospital." "I was about 50 metres away from the explosion and I fainted because of my wounds," he said in Al-Kindy hospital, referring to injuries to his shoulder and a hand. Shaab, a mixed neighbourhood, is located north of Sadr City, an overwhelmingly Shiite area in the Iraqi capital.
The car bomb occurred on a main road just after midday. Although two security checkpoints were located nearby, the site of the explosion was not restricted. The blast came a day after a US military spokesman said attacks in Iraq had dropped to their lowest levels since the months following the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. "Attacks are at their lowest since August 2003," Major General David Perkins said, adding that incidents were down 90 percent from June 2007.
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