Deadly mortar attack stokes Iraq Shia pilgrimage fears

Deadly mortar attack stokes Iraq Shia pilgrimage fears

A deadly mortar attack Friday near the Iraqi city of Karbala stoked security concerns as millions of Shiite pilgrims gathered for one of the largest religious gatherings in the world.

Iraqi Shiite Muslim pilgrims take part in Friday prayers at the shrine of Imam Abbas in Karbala, 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Baghdad on December 12, 2014, ahead of the Arbaeen religious festival

With a few hours to go until the Arbaeen commemoration reaches its climax on Saturday, a sea of black-clad devotees filled the streets, waving flags, beating their chests and chanting.

"There were one person killed and four wounded when mortar rounds hit an area on the western side of the city" shortly after midnight, a police colonel said.

"They crashed into an area called Souk al-Basra, around seven kilometres (four miles) from the city centre," he said, adding the victims were residents and not pilgrims.

A medical source in the holy city of Karbala confirmed the toll.

Record numbers of Shiite faithful have been converging on Karbala from across Iraq and other countries for Arbaeen, which marks the end of a 40-day period of mourning following the anniversary of Imam Hussein's death.

Hussein is one of the most revered figures for Shiites, who are the largest community in Iraq and the overwhelming majority in neighbouring Iran.

Defence Minister Khaled al-Obeidi said on Thursday that more than 17 million pilgrims had come to Karbala for Arbaeen, which in a normal year is already considered one of the largest religious gatherings in the world.

Brigadier General Qais Khalaf Rahim, head of operations command for the Karbala area, said "the number of visitors is far greater than last year's".

"We had to open more routes to Karbala and double the number of cars, buses and trucks transporting pilgrims to the city," he told reporters.

This year's pilgrimage has taken on a political dimension as it is the first since the devastating offensive the Islamic State group launched in Iraq in June.

The jihadist organisation -- led by Sunni extremists -- considers Shiites to be heretics and has made targeting the community one of its main objectives.

- Prime target -

Millions of faithful have for days been converging on the holy city where Hussein was killed in battle and beheaded in 680 AD, entire families trekking for days on the roads and sleeping in the open.

Central Baghdad has been in lockdown mode much of the week as authorities restricted access and movement in order to avoid a complete logjam and minimise the risks of major bomb attacks.

Three people were killed and four wounded earlier this week, according to security and medical sources, when a bomb went off in northeastern Baghdad near one of the thousands of tents set up to serve food and beverages to marching pilgrims.

Three people also died Friday in a stampede as they crossed the border from Iran, a spokesman for the Iraq Red Crescent Haidar al-Jaberi said.

However, given how exposed the pilgrims are and what a prime target they are for IS fighters, very few incidents have been reported so far.

Iraqi officials have stressed how crucial a recent military victory against the jihadists in the Jurf al-Sakhr area has been in making the pilgrimage possible.

The continued presence there of IS fighters would have exposed the millions of southbound pilgrims walking through an area which has seen some of the worst sectarian violence of the past decade and been dubbed the "triangle of death".

Shiite militias have played a leading role in the battle for Jurf al-Sakhr, an area between Baghdad and Karbala where jihadists were supplied from their strongholds in the western Anbar province and which has seen some of the fiercest fighting since June.

Communications Minister Hassan al-Rashed told AFP earlier this week that fighters who took over former IS positions in Jurf al-Sakhr found evidence that the jihadists had been planning to target Karbala.

The bombing of a revered Shiite shrine in the city of Samarra in February 2006 was the main trigger for a bloody sectarian war between Iraq's Sunnis and Shiites.

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