
Over thirty people were confirmed dead and dozens more wounded in a bomb attack on a busy market in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
Security sources told Reuters news
agency that women and children were among those killed in Monday's attack on
the market. Some shops were set on fire, they said.
The device exploded in the al-Wuhailat
market, in the northern Sadr City area, as families prepared for the Islamic
festival of Eid al-Adha on Tuesday.
It was the deadliest bombing in Baghdad
in six months.
The Islamic State group (IS) claimed it
was behind the blast, saying one of its members detonated an explosive vest.
The Iraqi government declared victory in
its war against the Sunni Muslim jihadist group at the end of 2017.
However, sleeper cells continue to wage
a low-level insurgency in the country.
IS said it was behind a car bomb blast in April that killed four people at another market in Sadr City, which is predominantly Shia Muslim.
t also claimed a twin suicide bombing
attack in January in Tayaran Square that left 32 people dead. That was the
deadliest bombing in the capital in three years.
An Iraqi military spokesman said Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi had ordered the arrest of the commander of the federal police regiment in charge of security in the market area, and that an investigation had begun.
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