In Baghdad's northern Kasra neighbourhood, a bomb attached to an army officer's car killed his son and wounded five civilian pedestrians, a police officer and a medical official said. The officer was not in the car at the time of the explosion, authorities said.
A car bomb explosion followed by other two bombs in a commercial area of Baghdad's western Amiriyah neighbourhood killed eight civilians and wounded 15, a police officer and a medical official said.
And in Baghdad's southeastern Bayaa neighbourhood, gunmen attacked a supermarket, killing the two brothers who own it, a police officer and a medical official said. Two shoppers were wounded, they said.
All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to release information to journalists.
The attacks came a day after a series of coordinated explosions hit mainly Shiite commercial areas in Baghdad and outside the capital, killing at least 35 people and wounding 120.
Last Thursday, a suicide bomber struck a group of Shiites gathered in Sadiyah to commemorate the 7th century death of a revered Shiite shrine. That attack killed at least 32 people and wounded 75.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, but suicide attacks and large-scale bombings - especially against security forces or crowded markets in Shiite areas - are a favourite tactic of al-Qaeda's local branch and Sunni insurgents. The Sunni extremists launch such attacks as they view Shiites as heretics.
Violence in Iraq in the past eight months has killed more than 5,500, according to the United Nations. Thursday's explosion brings the death toll across the country this month to 292, according to an Associated Press count.
- AP