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Baghdad: Masked gunmen stopped two minivans carrying students north of Baghdad, ordered the passengers off, separated Shiites from Sunni Arabs, and killed the 21 students ''in the name of Islam,'' a witness said.
In predominantly Shiite southern Basra, police hunting for militants stormed a Sunni Arab mosque early Sunday, just hours after a car bombing. The ensuing firefight killed nine.
The two attacks on Sunday dealt a blow to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's pledge to curb sectarian violence. He again failed to reach consensus Sunday among Iraq's ethnic and sectarian parties on candidates for interior and defense minister - posts he must fill to implement his ambitious plan to take control of Iraq's security from US-led forces within 18 months.
Violence linked to Shiite and Sunni Arab animosity has grown increasingly worse since February 22, when bombs ravaged the golden dome of a revered Shiite mosque in predominantly Sunni Arab Samarra.
Sectarian tensions have run particularly high in Baghdad, Basra and Diyala province, a mixed Sunni Arab-Shiite region. And Sunday's attacks came just days after terrorist mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi renewed his call for Sunni Arabs to take up arms against Shiites, whom he often vilifies as infidels.
On Monday, gunmen in a car killed two Sunni brothers as they were driving to college in the religiously mixed neighborhood of Sadiyah in southwestern Baghdad, police Lt Maitham Abdul Razzaq said. The victims, Ahmed and Arkan Sarhan were in their early 20s.
Iraqi police also found the blindfolded and bound body of a man who had been shot in the head and chest elsewhere in the capital, Razzaq said.
In the minibus ambush, a car and an SUV stopped the vehicles near the town of Qara Tappah, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) northeast of Baghdad and near Diyala province, electrician Haqi Ismail, 48, told The Associated Press.
Ismail said he had been driving his pickup truck behind the vans and was stopped too. About 15 masked men wearing traditional robes known as a dishdashas forced everyone out of the vehicles, he said.
''They asked us to show our IDs, and then instructed us to stand in a line, separating the Sunni from the Shiite due to the IDs and also due to the faces,'' said Ismail, a Shiite Kurd.
He said the gunmen ordered the students to lie down and before they opened fire one shouted, ''On behalf of Islam, today we will dig a mass grave for you. You are traitors.''
Ismail said he was injured but did not move.
''One of the gunmen kicked me to be sure that I was dead,'' he said, speaking from his hospital bed in Sulaimaniyah, north of Qara Tappah.
Two of the victims were high school students, ages 17 and 18, and nine were students at al-Yarmouk University in Baqouba, ages 21-22, said Qara Tappah's mayor, Serwan Shokir. The rest were men in their mid-to-late 30s, who worked as laborers or for the power company, the mayor said.
The Basra violence - the car bomb Saturday and mosque raid early Sunday _ came days after al-Maliki declared a state of emergency in the city, vowing to crack down with an ''iron fist'' on gangs fighting for power.
Basra police surrounded the al-Arab mosque just after midnight Saturday, tipped off that militants holed up inside had opened fire. Also, Iraqi forces had found two vehicles packed with explosives near the mosque, similar to the car bomb used to attack a crowded market, killing 28 people and wounding 62.
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