WATCH: Caretaker 'ensured' safety of Iraqi shrine - just before deadly blast
The caretaker of a Shia shrine near Baghdad assured Middle East Eye that the safety of the site was "ensured" only weeks before the deadly Islamic State (IS) group-claimed attack on Thursday night.
Thirty-five people were killed and 65 wounded when IS, using suicide bombers, guns and mortar fire, attacked the Sayyid Mohammed shrine in Balad, a town about 70km north of the capital.
But in late May, Hajj Hussein Jaafar Abbas, the shrine's custodian, told MEE: "Thank God, and thanks to the Popular Mobilisation Units and the armed forces the security of visitors to this holy site has been ensured."
Watch MEE's interview with Abbas:
The attack on the shrine followed a devastating bombing in Baghdad on 3 July that tore through a crowded shopping area ahead of the Eid al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of the holy Muslim month of Ramadan. At least 292 people were killed and many are still missing.
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