Suicide bomber killed 25 in soccer stadium
A suicide bomber walked into an Iraqi soccer stadium Friday and blew himself up -- killing at least 25 people and wounding 90 more, security officials said.
A
crowd had gathered for a ceremony to mark a championship for a popular
local soccer team when the bomb exploded, the head of the Babil province
security committee, Baydhan AL Hamdani, told CNN.
A
video posted on YouTube showed soccer players approaching a table
holding trophies before an explosion occurred. CNN could not
independently authenticate the video.
The
attacker struck at AL-Shuhadaa stadium in the Babil province city of
Iskandariya, roughly 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Baghdad.
ISIS claimed responsibility, according to a statement posted online by supporters.
The
special representative of the U.N. Secretary-General for Iraq, Jan
Kubis, condemned the bombing by "Daesh," another term for ISIS.
"The
evildoers are aiming their wrath at the innocent and vulnerable
civilians," he said. "Today, Daesh committed yet another atrocity,
targeting families who were enjoying their weekend attending a football
game in their hometown. This abhorrent act deserves the strongest
condemnation."
Kubis urged Iraqis to unite to thwart the terrorists' goals of inciting sectarian tensions in the country.
The U.S. State Department also spoke out.
"The
United States condemns today's suicide bombing claimed by Daesh ...
which killed and wounded dozens of Iraqis who had gathered to support a
local football game," said a statement from Elizabeth Trudeau, director
of the department's office of press relations.
Though
the attacks in Europe have gained the attention of the West, the bulk
of ISIS' brutal actions -- not to mention the vast majority of its
active members -- are in the Middle East.
Amanda
Rogers, a research fellow at Georgia State University, said the group
may launch more terror strikes as the Iraqi army retakes cities from
ISIS.
"Given that they are losing
their central territory, it would not be unexpected," Rogers said.
"These strikes fit into the broader strategy."
Rogers said ISIS has long advocated attacks on Muslims who don't support its rigid interpretation of Islam.
That was a tactic endorsed by Abu Musab AL-Zarqawi, the founder of al Qaeda in Iraq, the terror group that evolved into ISIS. Violence against Muslims caused a split between the late leader of al Qaeda central, Osama bin Laden, and AL-Zarqawi, who died in 2006.
"What
we see with ISIS doing now is an escalation of what we saw al-Zarqawi
do, targeting Muslims first and foremost, whether they're in the refugee
community or not," she said. "This is al-Zarqawi 101 and it's
essentially gone global."
The Sunni Islamist extremist group has boasted about terrorist attacks around the world, most recently this week's carnage in Brussels that killed 31 people and wounded more than 300.
The city of Iskandariya is no stranger to violence.
Post a Comment