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36 killed in Iraq attacks

A truck bomb blamed on al-Qaeda killed 25 people at a crowded market in central Iraq on Tuesday while attacks elsewhere claimed 11 lives, the latest victims of a spike in nationwide unrest.

The violence, the bloodiest of which was in predominantly Shiite areas, came ahead of commemoration ceremonies on Friday for the birth of a key figure in Shiite Islam, and left nearly 100 people wounded in the worst unrest to hit Iraq in three weeks. The morning blast struck a popular market in Diwaniyah, 160 kilometres [100 miles] south of Baghdad, killing 25 people and wounding 70, a police colonel told AFP. A hospital official in the city confirmed receiving 25 dead.

'This attack has the fingerprints of al-Qaeda,' provincial governor Salim Hussein Alwan told a news conference, adding authorities were investigating the explosion. Shortly after the attack, Diwaniyah officials imposed a curfew across the city of some 440,000 people. Women and children were among the victims of the attack that hit the main vegetable market of Diwaniyah, where 15 shops and stalls were destroyed, the officials added. The blast came just hours after near-simultaneous car bombs targeting Shiite pilgrims at Freyha, a village on the outskirts of the central shrine city of Karbala, killed four people.

'There were four killed and 13 wounded by two car bombs at around 7:00 am, east of Karbala,' provincial police spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ahmed al-Hasnawi said. A medical official in Karbala put the toll at four dead and 33 wounded.

Karbala is frequented by Shiite pilgrims as it is the site of shrines to Imam Hussein and his half-brother Abbas, both central figures to Shiite Islam.

Friday's ceremonies are to mark the birth of another figure, known as the 12th imam, and pilgrims visiting the city are frequent targets of Sunni insurgents.
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