Death Toll From ISIS-Claimed Bombing in Iraq Hits 200

At the height of the extremist group's power in 2014, ISIS had deprived the government of control of nearly one third of Iraqi territory

The death toll from Sunday's devastating truck bombing at a bustling Baghdad commercial street has reached 200, Mohammed Al-Rubaiy of Baghdad governate's security committee told NBC News.

Among the 200 are 81 unidentified bodies in the morgue, he added. There are 176 injuries. 

The bombing, claimed by the Islamic State group, was the deadliest terror attack in Iraq in a year and one of the worst single bombings in more than a decade of war and insurgency. It underscored the IS group's ability to strike the Iraqi capital despite a string of battlefield losses elsewhere in the country and fueled public anger toward the political leadership.

The suicide bomber blew up his explosives-laden vehicle in Baghdad's mostly Shiite Karada district, a favorite avenue for shoppers — especially during the holy month of Ramadan, with the streets and sidewalks filled with young people and families after they had broken their daylight fast.

Police and health officials told The Associated Press earlier Monday the toll stood at 142 but that it was likely to increase even further as rescuers are still looking for missing people. 

Hours after the bombing, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi visited the attack site in Karada, but a furious mob surrounded his convoy, yelling expletives, hurling rocks and shoes at the prime minister's cars and calling him a "thief."

In a statement issued later Sunday, al-Abadi ordered that a scandal-ridden bomb detection device be pulled from service. He also ordered the reopening of an investigation on the procurement of the British-made electronic wands, called ADE 651s.

In 2010, British authorities arrested the director of the British company ATSC Ltd. on fraud charges, prompting Iraqis to open their own investigation on alleged corruption charges against some officials. Iraqi authorities made some arrests, but the investigation went nowhere and the device remained in use.

Along with taking away the electronic wand detectors, al-Abadi also ordered that X-ray systems be installed at the entrances of provinces. He demanded the upgrades of the capital's security belt, increased aerial scanning, a step-up in intelligence efforts and the division of responsibility among various security units.

Iraqi and foreign officials have linked the recent increase in IS attacks —especially large-scale suicide bombings — with the string of losses the Islamic State group has faced on the battlefields across Iraq over the past year.

Iraqi security forces, supported by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, have retaken the cities of Tikrit, and Ramadi, the Anbar provincial capital. Also in Anbar, Iraqi forces liberated Fallujah from the extremist group just over a week ago.

At the height of the extremist group's power in 2014, IS had deprived the government of control of nearly one third of Iraqi territory. Now the militants are estimated to control only 14 percent, according to the prime minister's office. IS militants still control Iraq's second-largest northern city of Mosul, north of Baghdad.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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