7 killed in Baghdad explosion at Shiite mosque

A bomb blast
killed seven people at a Shiite mosque in eastern Baghdad on Friday and wounded
more than 20, police sources said.
The blast
hit the Imam Mahdi Al-Muntadhar Mosque in Baladiyat, near the massive and
densely populated district of Sadr City.
“At least
one attacker wearing a belt of explosives tried to enter the building but was
stopped by the guards, and detonated himself outside,” one officer said.
“Two
civilians were killed and nine people were wounded,” the source said. The
second officer confirmed the details and toll for the attack. At the scene,
security forces quickly deployed to cordon off the site, a photographer at the
mosque said.
It was a
rare attack on a Shiite place of worship in the Iraqi capital.
Extremists
carried out high-profile bombings of Iraqi Shiite sites during the worst of the
country’s sectarian violence after the US invasion that toppled dictator Saddam
Hussein in 2003.
Baghdad’s
security improved significantly with the defeat of Daesh in 2017 and bomb
attacks of any kind in the city have been rare since then.
Iraq has
witnessed a rare period of relative calm in recent months after decades of
back-to-back conflict, including years of sectarian violence that regularly saw
dozens killed in explosions in Baghdad.