Prayers, mourning after blast in Baghdad kills at least 126 people

Iraqis continue to search for their loved ones at the scene of the deadliest attack on the country in the past year.

Mourners react during a funeral of a victim who was killed in a suicide car bomb in the Karrada shopping area in Baghdad, during the funeral in Najaf on July 3, 2016.

Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters

July 3, 2016

Iraqis gathered in central Baghdad Saturday evening to watch the Euro Cup and break the Ramadan fast were targeted in the third mass slaughter carried out in ISIS’s name in the past week.

At least 126 people, including 25 children, and another 200 were wounded when a car bomb exploded in a crowded shopping district in Karrada, in the Iraqi capital, as CNN reported. The deadliest attack in Iraq in the past year, the suicide bombing occurred just a little over a week after US-backed Iraqi forces liberated Fallujah from ISIS control.

A second bomb exploded around midnight Saturday night in another predominantly Shiite area north of the capital, killing five more people.

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“These attacks only strengthen our resolve to support Iraqi security forces as they continue to take back territory from ISIL, just as we continue to intensify our efforts to root out ISIL's terrorist network and leaders,” the White House said in a statement.

An hour’s drive west of Baghdad, Fallujah was thought to serve as a launch pad for suicide bombers attacking Baghdad and Iraqi officials claimed that retaking Fallujah would improve security in and around Baghdad.

When Iraqi Prime Minister Haider-al-Abadi arrived at the scene of the Karada attack, his convoy was surrounded by civilians furious that their government’s military campaign and security measures had failed to prevent the attack.

In a statement, al-Abadi said he understands the reaction in "that moment of grief" by the residents who threw objects at his convoy, according to CNN, and he said he came to Karrada to console families and "share their sorrow in this painful tragedy that happened."

Iraqis gathered at the site of the attack to prayto mourn, and to help search the rubble for bodies throughout the day Sunday, as Jeremy Bowen reported for BBC.

"The lists of victims I saw included whole families – the father and his sons, the mother and her daughters – whole families were wiped out by this explosion," a member of the civil defense forces told Yahoo! News. "We need a number of days to be able to recover the bodies of victims. It is a difficult task." On Sunday, families posted photos of missing loved ones online in the hopes of locating them.

ISIS swiftly claimed responsibility for the bombing in a statement posted online, saying it had targeted Shiite Muslims, according to the Associated Press, while others vowed to stand united in the face of attacks designed to fuel sectarian tension and undermine confidence in the government.

These attacks followed the ISIS attacks in recent days on a restaurant in Dhaka, Bangladesh and the international airport in Istanbul.