Baghdad market struck by bombing

Baghdad such a nice name and the moment I look for it in News papers its mayhem, bomb blast and Shia Sunni retaliations, well was it the same always. Atleast after the mesopotomian civilisation perished and gave way to the Islamic politico-society it has been so i suppose. BBCNEWS

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A bomb attached to a lorry has exploded at the entrance to a vegetable market in Baghdad, killing two, police say.
About 20 others were injured in the bombing in the mainly Sunni Dora area of the Iraqi capital.
The latest attack follows two vast bombings on Wednesday which killed 95 people - the worst violence in Iraq for several months.
It comes as officials and MPs hold emergency talks to review the security situation as the violence continues.
After Wednesday's attacks, the government had pledged to tighten security in the capital - increasing security at checkpoints near government buildings and setting up concrete blast barriers around potential targets.
'No search'
But, according to an official quoted by the Associated Press, the truck passed through an Iraqi police checkpoint but was not searched before it exploded in the early hours of Friday morning.
There have been and there will be more of these sensational attacks
Gen David Petraeus
The fruit and vegetable market in the southern district of the city is a regular target for bombers. In July, 18 people died during an attack there.
The lorry bomb comes as heads of Iraq's political blocs and the country's defence, interior and national security ministers are meeting to discuss how to respond to the spike in security breaches.
The head of the US Central Command Gen Petraeus has warned that the number and ferocity of the attacks will almost inevitably increase.
''There have been and there will be more of these sensational attacks as al-Qaeda and Sunni extremists try to reignite the kind of sectarian violence that caused such damage in Iraq in 2006 and 2007," he told the BBC.
He said the country's security forces were far more capable of carrying out the kind of special operations that could prevent such attacks.
But the BBC's Natalia Antelava, in Baghdad, says Wednesday's bombs - within the heavily fortified Green Zone - have cast serious doubts on the ability of the country's security forces to defend its citizens.
Many Baghdad residents, she says, feel that whether it was recklessness or corruption that allowed lorries full of explosives to make their way through multiple Iraq army checkpoints, it shows that the army is not up to its task.
On Thursday, the Iraqi authorities detained 11 security officers on suspicion of negligence following Wednesday's truck bombs.

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