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Friday, November 16, 2012

Series of deadly bombings in Iraq

14 November 2012 Last updated at 09:24 GMT Pictures from Baghdad and Kirkuk show the extent of the damage

At least 14 people have been killed in a series of bombings across Iraq, police and medics say, on the eve of the Islamic month of Muharram.

Six car bombs and roadside devices had exploded in the capital, Baghdad, and four other cities, the AFP news agency cited officials as saying.

In the deadliest attack, at least three bombs went off simultaneously in Kirkuk, killing at least five people.

Muharram is an important part of the Shia Muslim religious calendar.

During its first 10 days, millions will commemorate the martyrdom in 680 of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, at the Battle of Karbala. The mourning culminates in the festival of Ashura.

Shia religious events have in the past frequently been targeted by extremist Sunni Islamist militant groups, including al-Qaeda in Iraq.

'No security'

No group has said it was behind Wednesday's bombings, most of which occurred in the ethnically-mixed, oil-rich northern province of Kirkuk.

Police said the attacks in Kirkuk city started with a car bomb explosion near the offices of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, led by the president of the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani.

As security forces and bystanders gathered at the scene there was a second blast, leaving at least five people dead and 34 wounded.

"My child was killed! His friends were killed!" Shukriyah Rauf screamed after the blast, according to AFP. "There is no security here, our homes were destroyed!"

A separate attack in Kirkuk wounded seven street cleaners.

"The car bomb targeted our friends - they are not police, soldiers or politicians," said Jassim al-Obeidi. "They just wanted to make a little money."

Another car bomb targeted an army patrol in the nearby, predominantly Sunni town of Hawija, killing at least four people.

In the town of Hilla, south of Baghdad, a vehicle packed with explosives blew up near a girls' secondary school and a crowded poultry market, leaving at least four people dead, among them reportedly schoolchildren.

Blasts were also reported in Baghdad's central Firdous Square and in the town of Balad Ruz, in the central province of Diyala.


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