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Deadly Iraq violence spills into fourth day  
 
At least seven more people reported to have been killed in Mosul and Fallujah 
after deadliest day in months.
Last Modified: 18 May 2013 09:55   
WARNING: This report by Al Jazeera's Dominic Kane contains graphic images 
Deadly violence in Iraq has spilled into a fourth 
day, with reports that seven more people killed and three more injured, 
amid fears over a new round of sectarian bloodshed.
Two police officers were killed on Saturday after an improvised 
device exploded at a federal police station south of Mosul, a Sunni 
Muslim-majority area in the country's north, Al Jazeera's Omar Al Saleh, 
reporting from Erbil, said.
He said one soldier was killed west of Mosul in a similar attack, which also 
wounded three soldiers.
Reuters news agency reported that four people were killed in a separate bomb 
attack in Fallujah, 65km west of Baghdad.
On Friday, more than 70 people were killed in bombings in majority 
Sunni Muslim districts in Baghdad and surrounding areas, in what has 
been noted as the deadliest day in Iraq in more than eight months.
The ongoing violence is reminiscent of the retaliatory attacks 
between the two Islamic branches in 2006-2007 that claimed tens of 
thousands of lives.
Martin Kobler, the UN envoy to the country, called on Iraqi leaders to stop the 
violence. "It is the responsibility of all leaders to stop 
the bloodshed in this country and to protect their citizens," he said in a 
statement on Friday.
"Small children are burned alive in cars. Worshippers are cut down outside 
their own mosques. This is beyond unacceptable."
Friday's violence
In the deadliest attack on Friday, twin bombings near a Sunni 
mosque in Baquba, north of Baghdad, killed 41 people and injured dozens.
One bomb exploded as worshippers were departing the Saria mosque 
while a second went off after people gathered at the scene of the first 
blast, police said.
  
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No group claimed responsibility for the attack.
On Friday in Baghdad, a bomb exploded near a shopping centre during 
evening rush hour in the mainly Sunni neighbourhood of Amariyah, killing at 
least 12 people and wounding 32.
That was followed by another bomb in a commercial district in Dora, 
another Sunni neighbourhood, which killed two people and wounded 22, 
according to officials.
In another attack, a roadside bomb exploded during a Sunni funeral 
procession in Madain, south of Baghdad, killing eight mourners and 
wounding 11, police said.
An explosion also struck a cafe in Fallujah, killing two people and wounding 
nine, according to police and hospital officials.
Sectarian nature
A day earlier, attacks targeted Shias in several locations. Our 
correspondent said the sectarian nature of recent attacks was worrying 
Iraqis.
"You have attacks on Shia worshippers, you have attacks on Sunni 
worshippers. It appears that whoever is behind those attacks wants to 
ignite sectarian strife," he said.
"It's an indication that security conditions are really going 
downhill in this country. There is a huge and growing sense of fear 
among Iraqis."
Tension has flared since Sunnis began protesting against what they 
say is mistreatment at the hands of the mainly Shia-led government, 
including random detentions and neglect.
The protests which began in December have largely been peaceful, but 
the number of attacks rose sharply after a deadly security crackdown on a Sunni 
protest camp in the country's north on April 23.  
 
Source: 
Al Jazeera and agencies  

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