A suicide bomber blew up a vehicle packed with explosives near a police station south of Baghdad today, killing at least 13 policemen in the country's deadliest attack in more than a month.The blast, which also wounded at least 41 policemen, left a two-metre (six-foot) crater and badly damaged the police station in the centre of the mainly Shiite city of Hilla, in addition to several nearby houses and shops.The violence comes with just months to go before all US troops must withdraw from Iraq, with Iraqi officials insisting local forces can maintain security in the war-wracked country.A police major and an official in the city's health department, both speaking on condition of anonymity, put the toll from today's suicide bombing at 13 dead and 41 wounded, all policemen.Among the dead were a police captain and a first lieutenant. There were also three officers among the wounded.The explosion badly damaged the facade and several sections of the police station, which houses the emergency-response brigade, and left a crater two metres (more than six feet) in diameter, an AFP journalist said.Several nearby houses and shops were also seriously damaged, and security forces cordoned off the blast site.The attack was the deadliest to hit Iraq since March 29, when a band of Al-Qaeda gunmen and suicide bombers managed to storm a provincial council building in the central city of Tikrit killing 58 people.The suicide bombing today also comes nearly a year after four co-ordinated car bombs against factory workers in Hilla killed 50 people on May 10, 2010.Mainly Shiite Hilla lies just beyond the edge of a confessionally mixed area south of the capital that earned the monicker Triangle of Death during the sectarian bloodshed that peaked in Iraq in 2006 and 2007.Over the years it has been repeatedly bombed by Sunni insurgents loyal to al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, whose death in a US special forces raid in Pakistan President Barack Obama announced in a White House address late on Sunday.Violence is down dramatically in Iraq from its peak, but attacks remain common. A total of 211 Iraqis were killed in violence in April, according to official figures.Some 45,000 American soldiers remain stationed in Iraq, with all of them set to withdraw by the end of the year, under the terms of a bilateral security pact.But a series of US officials visited Baghdad last month to press Iraqi leaders to decide quickly on whether or not they wanted an extended American military presence beyond the year-end deadline.

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