Qahtaniyah bombings
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Script error: No such module "Military navigation". Script error: No such module "Military navigation". The Qahtaniyah bombings occurred on August 14, 2007, when four coordinated suicide car bomb attacks detonated in the Yazidi towns of Til Ezer (al-Qahtaniyah) and Siba Sheikh Khidir (al-Jazirah), in northern Iraq.
796 people were killed and at least 1,500 others were wounded,[1][2][3] making it the Iraq War's deadliest car bomb attack. It is also the fourth deadliest act of terrorism in world history, after the September 11 attacks in the United States, the Camp Speicher massacre, also in Iraq, and the October 7th attack in Israel.[4] No group claimed responsibility for the attacks.
Tensions and background
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The attack was possibly connected with the murder of Du'a Khalil Aswad, a 17-year-old Yazidi girl, who was stoned to death by fellow Yazidis four months earlier. Aswad was believed to have wanted to convert in order to marry a Sunni.[8][9] Two weeks later, after a video of the stoning appeared on the Internet, Sunni gunmen[10] stopped minibuses filled with Yazidis; 23 Yazidi men were forced from a bus and shot dead.[11]
The Sinjar area, which has a mixed population of Yazidis, Kurds, Assyrians, Turkmen and Arabs, was scheduled to vote in a plebiscite on accession to the Kurdistan Region in December 2007. This caused hostility among the neighbouring Arab communities. A force of 600 Kurdish Peshmerga was subsequently deployed in the area, and ditches were dug around Yazidi villages to prevent further attacks.[12]
Details
The bombings occurred at around 7:20 pm on August 14, 2007, when four co-ordinated suicide bomb attacks detonated in the Yazidi towns of Qahtaniyah and Jazeera (Siba Sheikh Khidir), near Mosul, Nineveh Governorate, northern Iraq. They targeted the Yazidis, a religious minority in Iraq,[13][14] using a fuel tanker and three cars. An Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman said that two tons of explosives were used in the blasts, which crumbled buildings, trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage as entire neighborhoods were flattened. Rescuers dug underneath the destroyed buildings by hand to search for remaining survivors.[15]
"Hospitals here are running out of medicine. The pharmacies are empty. We need food, medicine and water otherwise there will be an even greater catastrophe," said Abdul-Rahim al-Shammari, mayor of the Al-Ba'aj District, which includes the devastated villages.[16]
There were 796 people killed and at least 1,562 more wounded.[1][2][3]
Responsibility
No group claimed responsibility for the attack. Iraq's President, Jalal Talabani, accused Iraqi Sunni insurgents of the bombings, pointing at the history of Sunni violence against Yazidis. They were reported to have distributed leaflets denouncing Yazidis as "anti-Islamic".[17] Although the attacks carry al-Qaeda's signature of multiple simultaneous attacks, it is unclear why they would refrain from claiming responsibility for such a successful operation. "We're looking at Al-Qaeda as the prime suspect," said Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Garver, a United States military spokesman.[18]
On September 3, 2007, the U.S. military reportedly killed the suspected mastermind of the bombings, Abu Muhammad al-Afri.[19]
See also
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- Genocide of Yazidis by ISIL
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- List of Yazidi settlements
- List of 2007 suicide bombings in Iraq
References
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- Bombings in the Iraqi insurgency (2003–2011)
- Nineveh Governorate in the Iraq War
- Persecution of Yazidis in Iraq
- Suicide bombings in 2007
- Suicide car and truck bombings in Iraq
- 2007 murders in Iraq
- Terrorist incidents in Iraq in 2007
- Massacres of the Iraq War
- 2007 building bombings
- August 2007 crimes in Asia
- August 2007 in Iraq
- Residential building bombings in Iraq
- Crime in Nineveh Governorate
- Islamic terrorist incidents in 2007
- Massacres in 2007
- Car and truck bombings in 2007
- Tank truck bombings
- Industrial fires and explosions in Iraq
- Terrorist incidents involving incendiary devices