Militant raid on Iraqi village kills 13
December 2, 2007 - 0:0
BAGHDAD (AP) -- Dozens of suspected al-Qaida militants raided a Shiite village north of Baghdad on Saturday, killing at least 13 people and torching homes, police said.
The attack on the predominantly Shiite village of Dwelah, about 45 miles north of Baghdad in Diyala province, began at about 6:30 a.m., a police officer said. The village was bombarded with mortar rounds, then 50 to 60 armed militants streamed in and opened fire, forcing families to flee.They burned homes and killed at least 13 villagers, including three children and two women, the officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release information about the attack. Fourteen villagers were wounded.
The villagers apparently also fought back, and three gunmen were killed in the attack in one of Iraq's most violent regions, police said.
The U.S. military has courted both Sunni and Shiite tribal leaders in Diyala, hoping to drive out al-Qaida after a similar effort saw some success in Iraq's westernmost province, Anbar, where Sunni tribes rose up against the organization's brutal tactics.
In the same area in the town of Duluiyah, a suicide attacker cornered in his home by local volunteers in the U.S.-backed program blew himself up on Friday, killing one of the fighters and wounding two, a police officer said.
And just a few miles north of that attack, insurgents killed another of the local guards, members of a so-called Awakening Council, another security official said. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release details of the attack.
About 30 miles south of the capital, militants stormed a Sunni village just outside Iskandariyah, killing three of the Awakening members and abducting five on Friday, including the village's tribal chief, according to Ahmed al-Azawi, spokesman for the Awakening Council and an Iskandariyah police officer.
Beginning with a Sunni rebellion against al-Qaida in Iraq in the former insurgent stronghold of Anbar province, the movement of local volunteers is considered a success in more than four years of war. It now includes some 60,000 Iraqis nationwide, most of them Sunni Arabs, according to senior U.S. military officers.
Separately, police in southern Iraq captured a suspect believed responsible for supplying and coordinating roadside bomb attacks against American and Iraqi troops, the U.S. military said.