Baghdad: Car bombings in Baghdad, including one near a hospital, killed at least eight people on Tuesday, security and medical officials said.
One blast hit a car park across the street from Yarmouk hospital in the west of the Iraqi capital, killing at least four people and wounding 10.
The second struck a residential area in Mahmudiyah, south of Baghdad, killing at least four people and wounding at least 13.
Bombings and shootings in were once a daily occurrence in the city, but have declined since the Daesh group spearheaded a sweeping offensive last June and overran large areas north and west of the city. That has tied them down in fighting outside the capital that distracts from their ability to carry out attacks against civilians in Baghdad.
Iraqi security forces and allied paramilitaries have regained significant territory from Daesh in recent months, with backing from a US-led coalition carrying out air strikes and training, besides Iran.
But large parts of two provinces — Nineveh in the north and Al Anbar in the west — remain under Daesh control.
On Monday seven people were killed and 31 wounded in a car bomb blast in Baghdad’s western neighbourhood of Bayaa, a police colonel said.
Another two people were killed the same day by a roadside bomb in Taji, just north of the capital, he said.