Gunmen stormed a bus station Wednesday northeast of Baghdad, seizing 24 
people and killing all but four of them, authorities said. An Iraqi general said 
the victims were Shiites, but police said their identities were unclear. 
The gunmen arrived in several cars at the bus station in Muqdadiyah, about 60 
miles northeast of Baghdad, about 6 a.m., forced the captives into four vehicles 
they commandeered at the scene and sped away, officials said.
Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Awad, the commander of the Iraqi army's 5th division, told 
government television that 20 bodies were later found and the victims were 
Shiites. He said four people were rescued.
Al-Awad said the attackers separated the Shiites from the Sunnis, then took 
the Shiites to the nearby village of Ballour. He said nearly 400 Iraqi soldiers 
raided the village and rescued the four survivors. The other captives had 
already been moved to the area where the bodies were found, he said. Al-Awad 
accused local police of failing to intervene.
But police said the identities had not been determined and they didn't know 
whether all the dead were Shiites. The Muqdadiyah area has a slight Sunni 
majority and is located in a province where sectarian tension runs high.
The massacre is part of a surge in sectarian violence that began Sunday when 
Shiite gunmen rampaged through a Baghdad neighborhood killing Sunnis. At least 
60 people were killed Tuesday across Iraq, most of them in the Baghdad area.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned that sectarian unrest was threatening 
the future of the nation.
"We all have the last chance to reconcile and agree among each others on 
avoiding conflict and blood. If we fail, God forbid, I don't know what the fate 
of Iraq will be," al-Maliki said during an address to parliament.
The United States had hoped that a unity government of Shiites, Sunnis and 
Kurds could calm sectarian tensions and convince insurgents to lay down their 
arms so that U.S. and its coalition partners could begin withdrawing troops 
starting this year.
But more than 1,607 Iraqis have been killed and nearly 2,500 wounded since 
al-Maliki's unity government took office May 20, according to an Associated 
Press count.
The top U.S. commander in Iraq said that "terrorists and death squads" are 
mainly responsible for a surge in sectarian violence in the capital, and he 
pledged to provide whatever U.S. forces are needed to avert civil war.
Gen. George Casey, at a joint news conference with Defense Secretary Donald 
H. Rumsfeld, told reporters that al-Qaida is carrying out terrorist killings in 
the Baghdad area in an attempt to "demonstrate that they are still relevant" 
after the June 7 killing of their leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
`What we are seeing now as a counter to that is death squads, primarily from 
Shiite extremist groups that are retaliating against civilians," Casey said. "So 
you have both sides now attacking civilians, and that is what has caused the 
recent spike in violence here in Baghdad."
Casey said he was consulting with the Iraqi government on means of 
counteracting the violence. Asked whether that might include putting more U.S. 
troops in the Baghdad area, Casey replied, "It may, yes."
Casey and Rumsfeld were meeting later with al-Malaki.
Rumsfeld said earlier Wednesday on an unannounced visit to an air base north 
of Baghdad the new Iraqi government is not yet ready to decide on security 
issues that will determine the pace of U.S. troop reductions this year.
Muqdadiyah was the site of a recent Iraqi military operation aimed at 
stopping an increase in insurgent activity in the mostly rural area, where 
sectarian tensions run high.
The Iraqi Islamic Party, the largest Sunni political group, complained last 
week that U.S. and Iraqi troops had surrounded 15 mostly Sunni villages near the 
city and called on them to allow the entry of food and medicine and to 
compensate farmers for damage to their crops. 
Shiite lawmaker Sheik Jalaluddin al-Saghir told a session of parliament that 
50 to 60 Shiites were abducted. But police in Diyala province, where Muqdadiyah 
is located, later put the figure at 24 and said it included Shiites and Sunnis. 
Also Wednesday, a suicide bomber blew himself up in a restaurant in the 
southeastern mixed Sunni-Shiite neighborhood of New Baghdad, killing eight 
people and wounding 30, police chief Col. Ahmed Aboud said. 
Gunmen on a motorcycles killed a former member of the ousted Baath Party and 
a taxi driver in separate attacks in Kut, 100 miles southeast of Baghdad. 
A parked car bomb also exploded near an Iraqi army base in Haswa, 30 miles 
south of Baghdad, wounding eight people, while gunmen attacked an army patrol to 
the north of the capital, wounding four soldiers, police said. 
Despite the sectarian bloodshed, fliers were circulated in a predominantly 
Sunni area north of Baghdad, urging Shiite families not to flee and warning 
people not to hurt members of the majority sect. The fliers were purported 
signed by the Mujahedeen Shura Council, an umbrella organization of several 
Islamic extremist groups, including al-Qaida in Iraq. 
In another positive sign, the Iraqi Accordance Front, the largest Sunni bloc 
in parliament, lifted its legislative boycott and attended Wednesday's session. 
It thanked the parliament for its help in seeking the release of kidnapped 
legislator Tayseer al-Mashhadani and called for a new spirit of cooperation. 
In his speech to parliament, al-Maliki urged his countrymen to unite behind 
his administration's efforts to stem the bloodshed. 
"It is not only the government that should be responsible. You chose the 
ministers and the prime ministers. You should not stand up and criticize the 
government," al-Maliki said in an apparent reference to some lawmakers who 
criticized the government because of the bad security situation. 
He also said that insurgents have plans to take control of Karkh, a large 
swath of western Baghdad that extends north. 
"They have intentions to occupy Karkh, but be sure that Iraqi forces are 
capable of repulsing them and have started striking them," he said. 
"The government cannot protect every child and every woman," al-Maliki said. 
"Military forces will deter anyone who tries to occupy any area." 
He added that the government will work on cleaning up the security and armed 
forces in order "to make them far from political groups and sectarianism."