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25 dead, dozens wounded in Iraq car bombings
By   Mohammed Tawfeeq  and   Joe Sterling , CNN
April 29, 2013 -- Updated 1454 GMT (2254 HKT) CNN.com 
Iraqis inspect the site of a car bomb explosion in Diwaniya, south of Baghdad, 
on April 29, 2013.
Baghdad (CNN) -- The longstanding bad blood between Sunnis 
and Shiites in Iraq boiled Monday amid another round of attacks: the 
killing of 25 people and wounding of dozens more in five car bombings.
Four of the blasts occurred in the Shiite heartland in the southern region of 
Iraq.
Two car bombs exploded near a busy 
outdoor market in Amara, killing 13 people and wounding 24 others. A 
bomb went off near an outdoor market in Diwaniya, killing six people and 
wounding 20 others. And two people died and 11 others were wounded in a bombing 
at a commercial area in Karbala.
Another blast occurred in 
Mahmoudiya, a predominantly Sunni area just south of Baghdad. Four 
people were killed and 14 others were wounded in that attack. 
Deadly wave of bombings across Iraq
Iraq pulls plug on 'misleading' TV networks 
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, nor was it clear 
whether they were related.
But the fighting has prompted fears among Iraqi leaders and international 
powers that the tensions between 
Sunnis and Shiites could escalate and bring a return of the full-blown 
sectarian war that raged last decade.
Since the overthrow of Saddam 
Hussein's government last decade, Sunni Arabs have been politically 
marginalized and Shiites, who represent a majority of Iraqis, have 
emerged with more power.
There have been protests for months by Sunni Arabs against the Shiite-led 
government and its prime 
minister, Nuri al-Maliki. The anger has escalated since a confrontation 
last week between police and protesters in Hawija.
The International Crisis Group last week said that the "failure to integrate 
Sunni Arabs into a genuinely 
representative political system in Baghdad risks turning Iraq's domestic crisis 
into a broader regional struggle."
"The most urgent task today is to 
tamp down the flames, and the burden for this lies above all with the 
government," the Belgium-based think tank said in a report. 
"The country is at a crossroads," said Martin Kobler, U.N. special 
representative in Iraq.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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