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Baghdad blasts mainly targeting Shiites kill 14

Baghdad blasts mainly targeting Shiites kill 14/AFP

Baghdad blasts mainly targeting Shiites kill 14/AFP

BAGHDAD, March 5- Nine bombings mainly targeting Shiite-majority areas of Baghdad killed at least 14 people and wounded dozens more on Wednesday, officials said, as Iraq suffers its worst violence in years.

The country has been hit by a year long surge in bloodshed that has reached levels not seen since 2008, driven by widespread discontent among its Sunni Arab minority and by the bloody civil war in neighbouring Syria.

Baghdad is one of the most frequently targeted cities and is hit by near-daily bombings and shootings.

The seven car bombs and two roadside bombs, which struck in six different areas of Baghdad, also wounded more than 70 people, the officials said.

One car bomb exploded near the University of Technology in the Karrada district of central Baghdad, killing three people and wounding at least 10.

“The terrorist was planning to blow up the car on the main road near the university,” but instead left it on a side street as security forces do not allow cars to stop there, a police officer at the scene said.

An AFP journalist saw the charred remains of the car bomb, and said two cars and several nearby homes were damaged by the blast.

While there was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, Sunni jihadists often target members of Iraq’s Shiite Muslim majority, whom they consider to be apostates.

The Baghdad blasts came a day after suicide bombers attacked the city council headquarters in Samarra, north of Baghdad, and took employees hostage.

 

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– Militants strike with impunity –

 

Another bomber detonated an explosives rigged vehicle after police and anti Al Qaeda militiamen arrived at the scene, while the two inside the building also blew themselves up after exchanging fire with security forces.

The violence, which showcased the impunity with which militants can strike even targets that should be highly secure, killed six people and wounded 46.

Powerful militant group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which operates in both Iraq and Syria, claimed the attack in a statement posted on the Honein jihadist forum.

The statement said that “three lions of the Islamic State” attacked the building, “killed its guards and executed its members, and took complete control of the council”.

Militants have carried out similar assaults elsewhere in Salaheddin province, north of Baghdad, and battled security forces for control of the Sulaiman Bek area, killing dozens of people.

The government also faces a more than two-month crisis in Anbar province, west of Baghdad, where it has lost all of the city of Fallujah as well as shifting parts of provincial capital Ramadi to anti-government militants.

It is the first time anti-government forces have exercised such open control in major cities since the peak of the deadly violence that followed the US led invasion of 2003.

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More than 370,000 people may have been displaced by the violence in Anbar during the latest crisis, according to the United Nations.

Violence in Iraq has killed almost 1,800 people since January 1, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.

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