Wave of attacks kill 20 in Iraq

File image - Civilians gather at the scene of a car bomb attack in the east Baghdad neighbourhood of Kamaliya, Iraq.

File image - Civilians gather at the scene of a car bomb attack in the east Baghdad neighbourhood of Kamaliya, Iraq.

Published Apr 15, 2013

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Baghdad - Car bombs and attacks on cities across Iraq, including two blasts at a checkpoint at Baghdad international airport, killed at least 20 people and wounded more than 200 on Monday, police said.

The wave of attacks in Baghdad, Kirkuk, Tuz Khurmato and other towns to the north to south, came days before Iraqis vote in provincial elections that will test political stability more than a year after US troops left the country.

No one claimed responsibility for Monday's bombings, but al-Qaeda's local wing, Islamic State of Iraq, and other Sunni Islamist groups have vowed to wage a campaign against Shi'as and the government to stoke sectarian confrontation.

Two people were killed by car bombs that exploded at a Baghdad airport checkpoint, police sources said.

Attacks on the heavily guarded airport and the fortified International Zone housing many embassies are rare, but insurgents have stepped up bombings in 2013.

“Two vehicles managed to reach the entrance of Baghdad airport and were left parked there. While we were doing routine searches, the two cars exploded seconds apart. Two passengers travelling to the airport were killed,” a police source said.

The most deadly attack was in Tuz Khurmato, 170km north of Baghdad, where four bombs targeting police patrols killed five people and wounded 67, officials said.

Iraqis vote on Saturday for members of provincial councils in a ballot that will test Shi'a Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's political muscle against Shi'a and Sunni rivals before a parliamentary election in 2014.

Ten years after the US-led invasion of Iraq, al-Qaeda is regaining ground, especially in the western desert close to Syria's border. Islamic State of Iraq says it has joined forces with the al-Nusra Front rebels fighting in Syria.

Sunni insurgents, especially al-Qaeda, see Baghdad's Shi'a-led government as oppressors of the country's Sunni minority and see Shi'as in general as apostates from true Islam. - Reuters

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