The attacks late yesterday were the latest in spiralling violence which authorities have failed to stem, with the worst bloodshed in five years raising worries of a return to the all-out Sunni-Shiite sectarian conflict that killed tens of thousands in past years.
Yesterday's violence followed major security operations against militants that officials hailed as having resulted in the killing and capture of many.
Overall, 16 car bombs and a series of shootings and other blasts killed at least 61 people and wounded nearly 300 across the country yesterday, security and medical officials said.
The blasts hit public markets, cafes, and restaurants, killing 37 people overall, while violence earlier yesterday killed two others in the capital, according to security and medical officials
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At Baghdad's Al-Kindi hospital, medics treated a man, apparently a soldier, whose face, chest and arms were covered in blood.
Medics sprinted into the hospital pushing people on stretchers, one of them a blanket-swathed man whose eyes were closed. Another man ran behind the stretcher, weeping as it was wheeled into the hospital.
Also yesterday, a suicide bomber detonated an explosives-rigged vehicle near a police checkpoint in Tuz Khurmatu, north of the capital, killing nine people. A car bomb in Kirkuk, also north of Baghdad, killed an engineer.
Two car bombs in the southern city of Nasiriyah killed four, while a car bomb in the shrine city of Karbala left five others dead.
Elsewhere, three people were killed and five others wounded in separate attacks in Babil and Nineveh provinces.