U.S. soldiers shot and killed a young Iraqi girl after firing
a warning shot at a woman who "appeared to be signaling
to someone" along a stretch of road where several roadside
bombs had recently been found, a military official said early
Thursday.
Later Thursday, police said a parked car bomb had exploded
in a commercial district of central Baghdad, killing eight
people and wounding another 41.
The bombing took place off a bridge in Tahrir Square, a district
of clothing shops just outside the heavily fortified Green
Zone, which houses the U.S. Embassy and much of the Iraqi
government, an Iraqi police official said on condition of
anonymity as he wasn't authorized to release the information.
No more information was immediately available.
The shooting, which took place Wednesday afternoon, occurred
in the volatile Diyala province north of Baghdad. An exact
location was not given in a military statement.
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The girl appeared to be "around 10 years old,"
said Maj. Brad Leighton, a military spokesman.
There has been an increase in the use of women as suicide
bombers in Iraq.
The latest such attack occurred Monday when a female suicide
bomber killed a U.S.-backed Sunni leader who formed a group
to fight against al Qaeda insurgents in Diyala after his guards
ushered her into the home without searching her.
Leighton, however, said preliminary reports indicated that
soldiers didn't believe the woman posed a threat of being
a suicide bomber, but rather "they were afraid she was
signaling to someone that the convoy was going by."
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