A suicide bomber blew himself up inside Baghdad's largest Sunni mosque Sunday night, killing 28 people and wounding 37 others, an interior ministry official said.
Parliament lawmaker Khaled al-Fahdawi was among the dead in the attack, officials said.
Maj. Gen. Qassem al-Moussawi, a spokesman for Baghdad's military operations command, confirmed the attack happened inside the Um al-Qura mosque during prayers in the western Baghdad neighborhood of al-Jamiaah.
The blue-domed building is the largest Sunni mosque in Baghdad.
The attack demonstrates anew that security measures to protect Iraqis as U.S. forces prepare to leave remain riddled with gaps, and shows the extent to which militants want to extend violence even as the eight-year U.S. presence winds down.
That the bomber detonated his explosives vest inside the mosque is particularly alarming, because it is reminiscent of a 2006 attack on a Shiite shrine in the Sunni city of Samarra that fueled widespread sectarian violence and brought Iraq to the brink of civil war.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for Sunday's bombing, although suicide bombings generally are a hallmark of al-Qaida.
The mosque's security is provided by the government-supported Sunni Endowment group, and al-Moussawi raised the possibility that the bomber had inside help.
"For sure there must have been someone inside the mosque who helped the bomber," al-Moussawi said. "It must have been someone who is protecting the mosque."
The head of the mosque is Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai, who is reputed for his sermons against violent extremism.
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