A bomb killed at least 13 people at a Baghdad market selling motorbikes and furniture today, the latest in a series of attacks that have intensified ahead of the withdrawal of US combat troops from Iraqi cities.
One police source said as many as 19 people were killed after the bomb, planted on a motorcycle, exploded in the market in the industrial area of Bab al-Sheikh, a mixed but majority Shia Muslim part of central Baghdad.
Forty-five people were wounded, police said.
Shredded shoes and bits of bloody clothing were scattered around the twisted frames of motorbikes. The blast site was swiftly sealed off by Iraqi soldiers and police.
US and Iraqi officials have warned they expect the number of attacks to rise as US combat troops leave Iraq's urban centers by June 30th, a milestone in a bilateral pact that sets a deadline for the withdrawal of all US troops by 2012.
A spate of bombings in Baghdad and other parts of Iraq has raised doubts about whether the Iraqi security forces can take over the fight against a stubborn insurgency.
Despite today's bombing and two others this week that killed 151 people, US President Barack Obama said Iraq's security had continued to "dramatically improve," but that he had concerns about the political climate.
"I haven't seen as much political progress in Iraq, negotiations between the Sunni, the Shia and the Kurds, as I would like to see," Mr Obama said in Washington.
"So there ... will continue to be incidents of violence inside of Iraq for some time.
They are at a much, much lower level than they were in the past."
He said if the government could settle differences on issues like boundaries and oil revenues, Iraq's security situation would improve further.
Reuters