At least a dozen people were killed from three sets of bombings that rocked Baghdad on Thursday evening. (File photo: Reuters) 
      AFP, Baghdad
Friday, 28 March 2014
Friday, 28 March 2014
Three sets of bombings in Baghdad killed at least a dozen people  Thursday evening, the latest in a surge in bloodshed in Iraq just weeks  ahead of scheduled parliamentary elections.
Two roadside bombs  that exploded in Amriyah in western Baghdad, a car bomb in the northern  district of Adhamiyah -- both of which are Sunni-majority -- and another  vehicle in the Saidiyah neighborhood also wounded at least 30 people,  the sources said.
The car bomb in Adhamiyah, which struck near  the massive Abu Hanifa mosque, killed at least seven people and wounded  22, while the twin bombings in Amriyah left four others dead.
Another car bombing in Saidiyah killed one more.
The  blasts came just ahead of the weekend in Baghdad, when markets and  cafes are typically packed, and continue a trend of post-sunset attacks  in the capital.
Violence in the city had previously been concentrated during morning rush hour.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks.
Sunni  militant groups such as the powerful Islamic State of Iraq and Syria  (ISIS) jihadist group are often blamed for such bombings targeting  civilians, including those against Sunnis, because the insurgent groups  do not regard them as sufficiently faithful.
Elsewhere in Iraq, attacks north of the capital killed three people including a police colonel.
Violence  in Iraq is at its highest level since 2008, with near-daily attacks  across the country and anti-government fighters in control of an entire  town on Baghdad's doorstep.
The bloodshed has been driven  principally by anger among the Sunni Arab minority, who complain of  mistreatment by the Shiite-led government and security forces, as well  as by the civil war in neighboring Syria.
More than 450 people  have been killed so far this month and upwards of 2,100 since the  beginning of the year, according to AFP figures based on reports from  security and medical sources.
Analysts and diplomats have called  for the Shiite-led authorities to do more to reach out to the  disaffected Sunni minority in a bid to reduce support for militancy.
But with the elections looming on April 30, political leaders have been loath to be seen to compromise.
 
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