This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/middle_east/6966750.stm

The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 1 Version 2
City cleared after Iraq clashes Iraqi city cleared after clashes
(about 2 hours later)
Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims have been ordered to leave a Shia festival in the Iraqi city of Karbala after heavy shooting broke out in the city.Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims have been ordered to leave a Shia festival in the Iraqi city of Karbala after heavy shooting broke out in the city.
Gunmen exchanged fire with police near the holy Shia shrine of Imam Hussein, causing panic among worshippers.Gunmen exchanged fire with police near the holy Shia shrine of Imam Hussein, causing panic among worshippers.
Iraqi police say 25 people have been killed and 65 injured - mostly pilgrims or Iraqi security forces - since clashes erupted on Monday evening.Iraqi police say 25 people have been killed and 65 injured - mostly pilgrims or Iraqi security forces - since clashes erupted on Monday evening.
Police have stopped people entering Karbala and have sealed off the shrine.Police have stopped people entering Karbala and have sealed off the shrine.
Shias gather in the city each year to mark the birthday of the Imam Mahdi. An indefinite curfew has also been imposed on the old city, which houses the holiest shrines.
Witnesses report seeing columns of smoke rise from the city and hearing the sound of intense gunfire. Witnesses report seeing columns of smoke rise from the city and hearing the sound of intense gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades.
The BBC's Mike Wooldridge, in Baghdad, says that initially, trouble appeared to revolve around the tight security checks imposed to protect the pilgrims but the motive for the latest clashes is not yet clear. I am hiding in a shop. I can hear the sound of gunshots. The situation is very unstable and the Iraqi army and police commandos have been deployed on the streets and on rooftops Karbala pilgrim
A member of Karbala city council told the Associated Press news agency that the latest fighting had sparked pandemonium, sending pilgrims running in all directions to escape.
"We don't know what's going on," he said. "All we know is the huge numbers of pilgrims was too much for the checkpoints to handle, and now there is shooting."
An unnamed pilgrim described the scene to Reuters news agency.
"I am hiding in a shop. I can hear the sound of gunshots. The situation is very unstable and the Iraqi army and police commandos have been deployed on the streets and on rooftops," he said.
Reinforcements being sent
Interior ministry spokesman Major General Abdul Karim Khalaf told the BBC that "the next two to three hours will be decisive" in the confrontation between the security forces and gunmen, though he maintained that the security forces were now in full control.
Maj Gen Khalaf said entry and exit points into the area had been secured and that military reinforcements were being sent to the holy city.
There have been reports that the gunmen include members of the Mehdi Army militia, loyal to Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, but Maj Gen Khalaf declined to speculate on who the gunmen were, describing them repeatedly as lawless criminals who had been paid to undertake the attack.
Shias flock to Karbala each year to mark the birthday of the 9th Century Imam Mahdi, the last of 12 imams whom Shias venerate as saints, believing that they never died and will return to Earth to save mankind.
The celebrations had been due to reach their climax on Tuesday evening.
Tight security has been put in place because Sunni insurgents often launch attacks on such festivals.
Cause unknown
Violence began on Monday night when Shia pilgrims became angry at delays caused by the strict security measures.
According to witnesses, as scuffles broke out among the restive crowd, police opened fire killing at least five and wounding dozens.
But the BBC's Mike Wooldridge, in Baghdad, says that the motive for the latest clashes is not yet clear.
At least one pilgrim was also killed on Monday by gunmen taking shots at people driving to the festival.
Another nine people were killed on Monday, when a suicide bomber blew himself up after evening prayers in a mosque in the town of Falluja, west of Baghdad.
The violence comes just two days after Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki announced a deal between Iraqi Shia, Sunni and Kurdish politicians aimed at building national unity.
US President George W Bush welcomed the deal, but warned that much work remained to quell sectarian violence in the country.