19 killed in car bomb attacks on Iraq mosques

19 killed in car bomb attacks on Iraq mosques
Updated on

Summary Series of car bombs targeting Shiite worshippers killed at least 19people on Fiday.

 

BAGHDAD (AFP) - A series of car bombs near Shiite mosques targeting worshippers attending weekly prayers killed at least 19 people on Friday, the latest in a spike in unrest ahead of Iraq s first polls since 2010.


The blasts, which also wounded left 95 people, struck within an hour of each other in the Baghdad neighbourhoods of Binook, Qahira, Zafraniyah and Jihad, as well as in an area of southern Kirkuk city.


No group immediately claimed the attacks, but Sunni militants linked to Al-Qaeda frequently target Shiite Muslims whom they regard as apostates and supporters of the Shiite-led government.


In Baghdad, four car bombs were detonated near Shiite mosques in the east and west of the capital, leaving at least 12 people dead and 25 wounded, security and medical officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.


And in Kirkuk, which lies 240 kilometres (150 miles) north of the capital, three people died and 70 were hurt by another car bomb targeting a Shiite mosque, provincial health chief Sadiq Omar Rasul said.


Security forces threatened to detain AFP journalists for attempting to film video and take photographs of the aftermath of the violence in Baghdad.


The attacks come amid a spike in violence nationwide as the country prepares for its first elections in three years -- provincial polls that will be held in 12 of Iraq s 18 provinces on April 20.


Questions have been raised over the credibility of those polls as elections have been postponed in two provinces roiled by months of protests, and at least 11 candidates have been killed.


The polls are seen as a key barometer of support for Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki as he grapples with criticism from within his unity cabinet and months of protests in the minority Sunni Arab community.


And the attack in Kirkuk is also likely to raise tensions in a city at the heart of a long-running dispute over territory between the central government in Baghdad and the country s autonomous Kurdistan region.


The dispute is often cited by officials and diplomats as the biggest long-term threat to Iraq s stability.


Violence is down from its peak in 2006 and 2007 but attacks remain common, and this month s death toll of 256 is already the highest since August, according to figures compiled by AFP.
 

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