Violence has reached a level unseen since 2008, as Iraq emerged from a brutal conflict between minority Sunni Muslims and majority Shiites. Militants, including those linked to Al-Qaeda, a Sunni organisation, frequently target security forces and other government employees.
"It has become clear... That Iraq is subjected to a war of genocide targeting all of its components," Maliki said in his weekly address yesterday.
Al-Qaeda is once again "destroying the houses of citizens and killing them, and blowing up government departments," Maliki said.
Yesterday, gunmen killed six people in the northern city of Mosul, while five people were shot dead in and near the city the day before.
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In Baghdad, a roadside bomb in the Ghazaliyah area killed at least three people and wounded 11 yesterday, and another killed four people and wounded at least nine in Madain, south of the capital.
Two Sahwa anti-Al-Qaeda fighters were also kidnapped and killed in the northern province of Kirkuk, and a bomb killed a policeman in Baquba, the capital of Diyala province.
Four of them struck targets in and around the town of Rutba, about 110 kilometres (70 miles) from the border with Syria.
A suicide bomber detonated a tanker truck loaded with explosives at a police checkpoint east of the town, militants armed with heavy weapons struck the police station in Rutba itself and another bomber detonated a vehicle at a police checkpoint to its west.
Those attacks killed 18 police and wounded 25, while three civilians died when another suicide bomber blew up a tanker truck on a bridge west of Rutba.
The violence was just the latest in a series of coordinated attacks in Anbar.