Friday: 1 Briton, 6 Iraqis Killed; 9 Iraqis Wounded

by | May 15, 2009 | 0 Comments

Updated at 5:50 p.m. EDT, May 15, 2009

At least six Iraqis were killed and another nine were wounded in the latest attacks. No Coalition troops deaths were reported, but a British employee of a security firm was killed in Hilla. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called for a reduction in power-sharing pacts between Shi’ites and minority groups.

In Baghdad, a man was killed during a drive-by shooting in the Jihad neighborhood. A grenade attack on a U.S. patrol in New Baghdad wounded two civilians instead. Two civilians were injured during a bombing in Yarmouk.

In Mosul, one policeman was killed and a gunman was wounded during an attack on a checkpoint; possibly, another policeman was wounded. A female journalist spotted a bomb under her car; the device exploded as police approached it, but no casualties were reported. Also a council member’s nephew was kidnapped.

A roadside bomb blast in Hilla killed a British security employee and two Iraqi guards.

Two policemen and an Awakening Council member were wounded when gunmen attacked their Samarra area checkpoint.

The body of a woman in her 20s was discovered near Mandali. Because there were no reports of a missing woman, authorities believe she was killed in a family dispute.

A decapitated body was found in the Christian village of Tal Keif.

During a raid in Suwayra, police arrested 12 al-Qaeda suspects along with two Awakening Council members.

Kurdish forces in Sinjar defused an I.E.D. and a car bomb.

Kirkuk police arrested two people in possession of explosives.

Two suspects were arrested at a car bomb factory.

In Turkey, a landmine believed to have been planted by Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) rebels killed a Kurdish militia member and wounded a second one. The militia members were working alongside Turkish troops. A clash followed the bombing.

Margaret Griffis is a journalist from Miami Beach, Florida and has been covering Iraqi casualties for Antiwar.com since 2006.

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