Quiet end to Ramadan

Levels of violence rose slightly in Iraq over the past week with at least 36 people killed and 124 injured in nationwide attacks.

Bomb attacks left 17 people dead and 103 injured, a rise in small arms attacks left 13 people dead and 17 injured while indirect fire (rockets and mortars) left four people injured.

There were no suicide attacks reported in the last week of Ramadan.

Violence was most concentred in Mosul and Baghdad although there was a rise in activity in the provinces of Diyala and Salah ad-Din.

Two journalists were killed in separate incidents, one in Baghdad and one in Mosul, while two kidnap victims were freed by the police in an operation, also in Mosul.

In general the past fortnight has been quieter than normal, with heightened security measures imposed by the authorities whilst the Muslim population celebrated ‘Eid ul-Fitr. Conditions were particularly quiet over the ‘Eid weekend.

The government-formation process may pick up speed over the coming weeks now that the holy month of Ramadan has passed, but it could still take many weeks to complete.

In a positive development, Pastor Terry Jones of a small church in Florida decided against burning Qur’ans on the anniversary of the September 11th attacks.

Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani urged restraint against those intent on persecuting the Iraqi Christian community in response to the event, and with security measures increased around churches at the weekend there were no attacks recorded against Christians in the country.

Increase in Iraq Violence

Levels of violence rose in Iraq last week, a period which saw US combat operations draw to a close in the country.

At least 98 people were killed and 230 injured in nationwide violence, which is above the usual range of 20 to 90 fatalities and part of what appears to be a sustained rise in terrorist activity over the past month.

The most devastating attack took place in central Baghdad, where a suicide bomber targeted army recruits in Bab al-Muadham district, killing dozens and injuring up to 130. Otherwise, non-suicide bombings left 22 people dead and 92 injured.

In last week’s Iraq report AKE warned of the possible use of firearms with silencers for targeted killings in the capital. This warning has been realised with several ministry employees, judges, police officers and even a member of the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) shot dead in apparently targeted close quarter assassinations. Countrywide, this worrying rise in small arms attacks left 24 people dead and seven injured.

The capital has also seen a rise in indirect fire attacks (rockets and mortars), most of which targeted the International/Green Zone, although several fell short of this target, causing injuries in surrounding residential districts.

More positively, the security forces managed to rescue a kidnapped civilian in Diyala province while there were no reported incidents of violence in Iraqi Kurdistan (KRG territory).

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