A series
of car bomb explosions has killed at least 26 people and injured 94 others in
Iraq. The attackers targeted Shia neighborhoods, police checkpoints, and security
forces across the country.
The
deadliest attacks were bombs in three parked cars that went off in Taji, 20
kilometers north of Baghdad, killing eight people and wounding 28, AP reported.
Two
police officers were killed when a car bomb went off in the town of Balad Ruz,
90 kilometers northeast of the Iraqi capital.
In
Shula, northwestern Baghdad's Shia neighborhood, a suicide bomber detonated a
car packed with explosives, killing one and injuring seven others, an Iraqi
police source told AP.
In a
separate incident, an unidentified gunman killed an Iraqi police colonel in the
Amel neighborhood south of the capital. The shootout was followed by a car bomb
explosion, Al Jazeera reported.
Bombings
also reportedly targeted a police convoy and two police officers in Baquba,
north of Baghdad, and in Kut, south of the capital.
Iraqi
militants often use explosives against security troops. The last large-scale
attack was on September 26, when two roadside bombs killed five people near
Hilla south of Baghdad, including a police lieutenant colonel and two other
officers. The incident came the day after a series of insurgent attacks across
central Iraq that left nine people dead.
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