At least 10 people have been killed
in a powerful early-morning car bombing near the Red Cross headquarters building
in Baghdad. A series of secondary explosions have also been heard throughout
the Iraqi capital.
The blast in central Iraq set cars on fire and sent gray smoke billowing
into the air. Ambulances raced to the scene as secondary explosions rumbled
through Baghdad. Witnesses say one of the explosions occurred near the industry
ministry.
The bomb targeted the headquarters the International Committee of the Red
Cross, in the Karada district of Baghdad. Witnesses say it was carried in an
ambulance. U.S. troops arrived, within minutes, to cordon off the area.
The blast comes one day after several rockets smashed into the Al-Rasheed
Hotel in Baghdad, killing a U.S. officer and wounding more than a dozen other
people. U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, on a four-day visit to
the capital, was staying at the hotel. The building has housed some 300 U.S.
military personnel and civilian contractors since the end of major combat in
May.
Monday's attack on the Red Cross is the second time assailants have targeted
an international humanitarian organization in the Iraqi capital. In August,
a suicide car bomber struck the headquarters of the United Nations, killing
the most senior U.N. official in Iraq and 21 others.