Car bomb explodes near UN compound in Baghdad ( 2003-09-22 15:28) (Agencies)
A car bomb exploded Monday morning while the
vehicle was trying to approach the UN compound, killing at least two people and
injuring 11, police and witnesses said.
Wreckage from a car bomb that exploded
while being examined at a checkpoint near the U.N. compound at the Canal
Hotel in Baghdad, Iraq Sept. 22, 2003, is shown in this image from
television. At least two people were killed in the explosion.
[AP]
The blast occurred at the entrance to a
parking lot next to the UN compound at the Canal Hotel, a UN employee said on
condition of anonymity. The blast occurred about 150-200 meters (yards) from
hotel, scene of a devastating car bombing last month that killed about 20
people, including the UN's top envoy in Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello.
``It appeared to have been a suicide bombing. The bomber drove up and was
engaged by an Iraqi security individual just before the checkpoint'' at the lot
entrance, a US 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment spokesman, Capt. Sean Kirley, told
reporters at the scene. That policeman was killed, although it was not clear
whether he was shot or died in the explosion, he said.
Iraqi police Lt. Col. Thaer Ahmed said 11 other people, mostly policemen,
were wounded. Kirley said he didn't know whether any US troops were near the
scene at the time, but none was wounded. He said there was no damage to UN
buildings and that police had a few minutes warning of a possible attack. He
refused to elaborate.
United Nations staff have continued to work in undamaged offices at the hotel
complex since the Aug. 19 bombing.
The blast, which could be heard over much of the Iraqi capital, took place
two days before US President George W. Bush is expected to address the UN
General Assembly and offer an expanded role in rebuilding Iraq, a condition set
by many nations for contributing peacekeepers and money to the reconstruction
effort.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has made clear he wants assurances of security
for UN personnel in Baghdad along with any expanded role.
The United Nations curtailed its efforts in Iraq after the Aug. 19 bombing.
At the time of the attack, UN spokesman Fred Eckhard said there were about 300
international staff in Baghdad and@than 300 elsewhere in Iraq. These numbers are
thought to have now been dramatically reduced.
An Iraqi workman who was slightly injured said he saw cars trying to enter
the back parking lot when one of them exploded.
``It was as if I was being pushed and thrown three meters (three yards) from
where I was standing,'' the worker, Wissam Majid, said. ``I saw fire and smoke.
I started running away and then I lost consciousness.''
After the bombing, about 20 US military vehicles could be seen swarming
around the compound, and the area in northeastern Baghdad was sealed off by
Iraqi police.
The bomb exploded two days after an assassination attempt against Aquila
al-Hashimi, one of three women on the Iraqi Governing Council and a leading
candidate to become Iraq's UN ambassador if the interim government wins approval
to take the country's UN seat.
She was reported in serious but stable condition following the Saturday
attack, which occurred as she was riding in a car near her home in western
Baghdad. The Governing Council president, Ahmad Chalabi, blamed remnants of the
regime of Saddam Hussein, whose government was toppled by US-led forces in
April.
Since Bush declared an end to major combat operations on May 1, more than 160
American soldiers have been killed. More than 300 US soldiers have died in Iraq
since the US-led coalition launched military operations March 20.
The ongoing violence has raised questions about American stewardship of the
country and has led to calls for an expanded role for the United Nations in
post-Saddam Iraq.
On Sunday, Bush said he's not sure the United States will have to yield a
significantly larger role to the United Nations to make way for a new resolution
on Iraq. He continued to insist on an orderly transfer of authority to the
Iraqis rather than the quick action demanded by France.
In an exclusive interview with Fox News' Brit Hume, Bush said he will declare
in his speech Tuesday at the UN General Assembly that he ``made the right
decision and the others that joined us made the right decision'' to invade Iraq.
But the president said he will ask other nations to do more to help stabilize
Iraq.
``We would like a larger role for member states of the United Nations to
participate in Iraq,'' Bush said in the interview to be aired Monday night. ``I
mean, after all, we've got member states now, Great Britain and Poland, leading
multinational divisions to help make the country more secure.''
Asked if he was willing for the United Nations to play a larger role in the
political developments in Iraq to get a new resolution, Bush responded, ``I'm
not so sure we have to, for starters.''
But he said he did think it would be helpful to get UN help in writing a
constitution for Iraq.
``I mean, they're good at that,'' he said. ``Or, perhaps when an election
starts, they'll oversee the election. That would be deemed a larger role.''
Germany, France and Britain have also called for more authority for the world
body in Iraq, as Washington debates with its allies over a new UN resolution.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, however, has not joined France's call for a
quick handover of power to Iraqis, backing the US stance instead.
Bush said he would tell the United Nations that while some countries did not
agree with the US-led military action in Iraq, it's now in the international
community's best interest to not only rebuild Iraq, but rebuild Afghanistan,
fight AIDS and hunger, deal with slavery and proliferation of heinous weapons.
He said the United Nations has a chance to do more as a result of UN
resolution 1441.
The United States argues that UN resolution 1441, passed unanimously in
November, provided sufficient authority for the US-led war. That resolution
threatened Baghdad with ``serious consequences'' if it failed to show it had
handed over or destroyed its weapons of mass destruction.
``That's the resolution that said if you don't disarm there will be serious
consequences,'' he said. ``At least somebody (the United States) stood up and
said this is a definition of serious consequences.''