Suicide bomber kills five in Iraq polling station

June 17, 2013 04:30 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 08:37 pm IST - BAGHDAD

An Iraqi Federal policeman casts his vote at a polling centre during early voting for security forces in the country's provincial elections in Ramadi, 115 km west of Baghdad, on Monday.  A suicide bomber set off explosives among a group of policemen in the western town of Fallujah, killing three and wounding 21 others.

An Iraqi Federal policeman casts his vote at a polling centre during early voting for security forces in the country's provincial elections in Ramadi, 115 km west of Baghdad, on Monday. A suicide bomber set off explosives among a group of policemen in the western town of Fallujah, killing three and wounding 21 others.

Three bomb attacks in Iraq including a blast inside a roadside restaurant killed 12 people on Monday, officials said, the latest in a surge of violence that has left nearly 2,000 dead since the beginning of April.

The bomb left inside the restaurant in Taji, which serves travelers on the highway linking Baghdad to several northern Sunni-majority cities, killed seven people including two women and a 12-year-old child, two police officers said. Twenty-five others were wounded.

Also in Taji, a bomb placed inside a minibus killed two commuters and wounding 11 others, the police added. Taji is a former insurgent stronghold, located about 20 km north of the Iraqi capital.

In the western town of Fallujah, a suicide bomber set off his explosives-laden belt among a group of policemen, killing three and wounding 21, another police official said. The policemen were waiting for buses to be transferred to a polling station to cast their ballots in Iraq’s provincial elections.

Fallujah, part of Anbar, is located 65 km west of Baghdad. Iraq delayed April provincial elections there and in another Sunni-majority province, Ninevah, because of security instability. Residents of these provinces will cast their ballots on Thursday.

Three medical officials confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to release information.

The attack followed a day when at least 51 people were killed in a wave of bombs and shootings across Iraq. Violence has spiked sharply in Iraq in recent months, with the death toll rising to levels not seen since 2008. More than 190 have died this month alone.

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