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Iraqis inspect the scene of a car bomb attack in the Ameen neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, Iraq Khalid Mohammed/AP/Press Association Images

Blasts targeting mainly Shiite areas kill 21 in Baghdad

Three car bombs struck the Sadr City slum, while others exploded in Ameen, Al-Husseiniya, Kamaliyah and Karrada.

A SERIES OF bombings mainly targeting Shiite areas of Baghdad killed at least 21 people today, officials said, in the latest violence to hit Iraq as it struggles with protests and a political crisis.

Three car bombs struck the sprawling Sadr City slum in the north of the city, car bombs exploded in Ameen, Al-Husseiniyah and Kamaliyah in the east, and a roadside bomb blew up in Karrada in central Baghdad, security and medics said.

Another roadside device went off in Saidiyah in the capital’s south. At least 21 people were killed and more than 120 were wounded in the attacks, the officials said.

Enraged

Residents of Sadr City were enraged by the bombings, and hospitals in the area were quickly crowded with people searching for relatives, an AFP journalist reported.

The carnage could have been even worse – the AFP journalist saw soldiers apparently working to defuse another car bomb in the area.

The Baghdad Operations Command, which is responsible for security in the capital, said in a statement that security forces defused a total of six car bombs, including three in Sadr City.

Heavy security measures were put in place after the Sadr City attacks, with some areas closed off. Security forces also searched cars at the main entrance to Sadr City and helicopters overflew the area, another AFP journalist said.

Also today, gunmen killed a police captain in front of his home in Mosul in north Iraq, security and medical officials said.

The attacks bring the number of people killed in violence this month to at least 157, according to an AFP tally based on reports from security and medical officials nationwide.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for the latest wave of attacks. But Sunni militants linked to the Al-Qaeda franchise in Iraq often target the Shiite majority in a bid to erode confidence in the central government and push the country back towards the bloody sectarian conflict of 2006-2007.

The latest violence comes as after nearly two months of anti-government protests centred on Sunni-majority areas in north and west Iraq, calling for the ouster of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shiite, and amid a festering political crisis.

- © AFP, 2013

Read: Attack on north Iraq police HQ kills 30>

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    Mute Pinel G
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    Aug 20th 2014, 4:02 PM

     

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    Mute 1 Human Being
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    Aug 20th 2014, 4:19 PM

    Doesn’t it happen anyway. where is all the stories about peak oil gone too have we stopped running out of oil. Has the price of oil decreased. Also the eternal a glass of wine is good for you one month the next month a glass of wine will probably kill your whole family. Extreme but an example of disappearing journalism none the less. What happened to investigative journalism or is that a short lived thing like snap chat?

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    Mute Philip King
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    Aug 20th 2014, 8:29 PM

    It all sounds a bit 1984ish to me. Disappearing news = write whatever you like so it can’t be referenced in the future.

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    Mute Niall Waters
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    Aug 20th 2014, 11:09 PM

    I thought The Journal already specialised in disappearing news with that Ebola story going missing fairly sharpish last week?

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