A bomb ripped through a vegetable market in a Shia section of Baghdad and a senior Sunni leader escaped assassination as at least 36 people were killed yesterday in a surge of violence that pushed Iraq closer still to sectarian civil war.

An Iraqi,left, mourns his policeman brother who was shot dead by unknown gunmen along with three other colleagues, in Mosul, 360 kilometers (225 miles) northwest of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, March 2, 2006. A bomb ripped through a vegetable market in a Shiite section of Baghdad and a senior Sunni leader escaped assassination as another 36 people were killed Thursday in a surge of violence that has pushed Iraq closer than ever to sectarian civil war. (AP Photo/Mohammed Ibrahim)
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An aide to Ibrahim al- Jaafari, the Prime Minister, meanwhile, lashed out at
Sunni, Kurdish and secular political leaders who have mounted a campaign to
deny him another term, saying the Shia United Iraqi alliance will not change
its candidate.
Haider al-Ibadi accused Mr Jaafari's critics of trying to delay the
formation of a new government. "There are some elements who have
personal differences with Mr Jaafari. The Alliance is still sticking to its
candidate," he said.
Leaders of three parties, including Sunnis, Kurds and the secularists of the
former prime minister Iyad Allawi, agreed on Wednesday to ask the main Shia
bloc to withdraw Mr Jaafari's nomination for prime minister. Shia officials
confirmed receiving a letter asking them to put forward a new candidate.
The move raises a new hurdle in US-backed talks on an inclusive government,
which broke down last week when Sunni parties pulled out in protest against
attacks on Sunni mosques triggered by the bombing on 22 February of the
golden-domed Askari shrine, a Shia mosque in the central city of Samarra.
Hundreds were killed in the sectarian fury that followed. They included 45
Sunni preachers and mosque staff, according to Sheikh Ahmed Abdul Ghafour
al-Samaraie, the head of the government's Sunni Endowment, which takes care
of Sunni mosques and shrines. He told a news conference that 37 Sunni
mosques were destroyed and 86 were damaged by grenades, rockets or gunfire.
Six others remained in the hands of Shia militiamen, he said.
Yesterday's bomb attack in the Baghdad vegetable market killed at least
eight people and wounded 14. Police evacuated the market after finding a
second bomb. Another bomb exploded in a minibus travelling through Sadr
City, a Shia ghetto in the Baghdad, killing five.
Gunmen also attacked the car of Adnan al-Dulaimi, the senior Sunni cleric
who leads the Sunnis' largest parliamentary bloc. One bodyguard was killed.
Mr Dulaimi had already sped away in another vehicle.
In the aftermath of the attacks, the government announced a one-day ban on
private vehicles in Baghdad and its outskirts.Police and army were
instructed to seal off the capital and seize any private vehicles that defy
the ban.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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