The Sunni militant offensive that has overrun much of northern and western Iraq in the past five weeks has caused a spike in violence as fighting rages on new battlefronts across the country.
At the same time, smaller scale attacks some of them targeting checkpoints, others hitting purely civilian areas remain a facet of daily life.
Today's first attack struck Baghdad's Shorja Market, an open air emporium that is one of the most popular places for residents to buy foodstuffs, clothes and electronics.
Baghdad has been on edge since the Sunni militant blitz led by the Islamic State extremist group seized the northern city of Mosul, vowing to push south to the capital.
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The city has seen several small scale bombings in recent weeks, but it has so far been free of the large, coordinated attacks that plagued it in the run-up to April elections.
A medical official in a hospital in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Kazimiyah confirmed the casualty figures. All of the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.