Bomb attacks continue; Iraqi police targeted

? As if to prove the capture of Saddam Hussein would not end the anti-coalition insurgency in Iraq, a suicide bomber driving a taxi attacked a police building Monday in Baghdad, killing eight policemen and wounding 10 others.

Residents said at least five civilians, including a 5-year-old girl, also were wounded by flying glass and debris in the attack in the Husainiyah district.

Earlier Monday, seven policemen were wounded when a car bomb exploded in the western Ameriyah neighborhood. That attack was partially foiled by Iraqi officers and U.S. Military Police who fired on a second explosives-packed vehicle, preventing it from ramming the police station and detonating, said U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Mark Hertling, of the 1st Armored Division.

The driver of the second car ran away, abandoning the vehicle without detonating it, Hertling said. The driver later was captured, according to Capt. Brad Loudon.

Loudon, an Overland Park native, is a graduate of Kansas University.

The car’s 550 pounds of plastic explosives, with a powerful limpet mine attached as a detonator, were defused, Hertling said.

Hertling said U.S. troops found yet another explosives-packed vehicle on Sunday parked in east Baghdad. It appeared to have been abandoned, possibly because of mechanical trouble.

“Right now, we don’t know what the target was,” Hertling said. “It goes with the intelligence we had yesterday, that there would be several (car bombs). We dodged a couple of bullets in Baghdad.”

The attacks came less than a day after U.S. officials announced the detention of Saddam and warned his capture could lead to an increase in attacks against troops of the U.S.-led coalition and their Iraqi allies.

People gather at the site where a suicide bomber attacked a police station in Baghdad's northern Husainiyah district. Monday's bombing killed eight policemen.

Lt. Col. Ali Amer said the explosion in Husainiyah, on Baghdad’s northern outskirts, occurred when a yellow Toyota Land Cruiser drove through the razor wire fence encircling the building, and detonated next to the gate. Several houses and shops were damaged and at least three cars were burned.

The blast left a 3-foot-deep crater about 30 feet from the building entrance. The facade was demolished by the blast. The force of the blast heaved the car into the air and into the station courtyard.