Attacks kill 9 civilians in Iraqi capital
Iraqi authorities blame the violence on the Daesh terrorist group
By Ibrahim Salih and Jamal Badrani
BAGHDAD
At least nine people were killed, mostly women, in a spate of attacks in the Iraqi capital Baghdad on Monday, according to a local police officer.
Unidentified gunmen broke into a house east of Baghdad and shot dead a man and four women, officer Yasser al-Mustafa told Anadolu Agency.
The attackers had fled the scene unscathed.
Two women were also killed when gunmen stopped their car in Zayyuna, east of Baghdad, al-Mustafa said.
Another man was gunned down by armed men in al-Husseiniya, north of Baghdad.
Meanwhile, a bomb blast killed one man and injured seven others near a marketplace west of Baghdad, the police officer said.
While there has been no claim of responsibility, the Iraqi capital has in recent months witnessed violent attacks -- which often target civilians -- on an almost daily basis.
Iraqi authorities blame the violence on the Daesh terrorist group, which still enjoys a significant presence in war-torn Iraq despite having suffered a string of recent military defeats.
Iraq’s security situation has deteriorated markedly since mid-2014, when Daesh captured Mosul -- the country’s second largest city -- along with vast swathes of territory in the country’s northern and western regions.
In recent months, the Iraqi army, backed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes and local allies on the ground, has since managed to retake much territory.
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