Revelers in
Baghdad have celebrated into the early hours after the Iraqi government lifted
a decade-long curfew. Hours earlier, two bombings in the Iraqi capital killed
and wounded dozens of people.
Deutsche Welle, 8 Feb 2015
The streets
of central Baghdad were filled with young Iraqis on Saturday night after Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi lifted a curfew which had largely been in place since
2004.
Under the
curfew, Baghdad residents had been told to stay at home between the hours of
midnight and 5 a.m.
Families as
well as groups of young men driving cars and waving flags were seen celebrating
in the Iraqi capital into the small hours.
"Before,
we felt like we were in a prison," a cafe owner, Faez Adbullillah Ahmed,
told AFP news agency.
The curfew
was originally enforced as part of a longstanding policy which aimed to curb
violence in the capital at night.
Al-Abadi
decided last week to bring the curfew to an end, with his office saying that
the move would allow there to "be normal life as much as possible, despite
the existence of a state of war."
The strict
measure failed, however, to prevent deadly bombings which continue to plague
Baghdad.
'Islamic
State' attack
Just hours
before the curfew was lifted on Saturday, a suicide bomber detonated explosives
in the Shiite neighborhood of New Baghdad, killing some 14 people and wounding
at least 38, according to police officials.
Shortly
afterward, two improvised explosive devices positioned 25 meters (27 yards)
apart went off at the popular Shorja market, killing at least 11 people and
wounding at least 26, according to police.
SITE
Intelligence Group, a US-based terrorism monitor, later said that the
"Islamic State" (IS) militant group had claimed responsibility for
the first attack.
Despite the
ongoing conflict between Iraqi forces and jihadist extremists, Baghdad has
remained relatively calm in recent months. Some bombings, however, have been
known to target Shiite-majority areas in the city.
ksb/cmk (AP, AFP)

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