At least 14 feared dead in suicide bombing in Baghdad

More than 30 wounded as Islamic State claims responsibility for attack in Iraq

Iraqis walk at the site of a suicide bombing near a checkpoint in the Kadhimiyah area, home to a major Shia shrine, in northern Baghdad. Photograph: Sabah Arar/AFP/Getty Images
Iraqis walk at the site of a suicide bombing near a checkpoint in the Kadhimiyah area, home to a major Shia shrine, in northern Baghdad. Photograph: Sabah Arar/AFP/Getty Images

At least 14 people have died after a suicide bomber attacked a security checkpoint in northern Baghdad on Sunday, Iraqi officials said.

The bomber, who was on foot, detonated his device at one of the busy entrances of the Shia district of Kadhimiyah, killing at least 10 civilians and four policemen, a police officer said.

At least 31 other people were wounded, he added.

Three more civilians were killed and 11 wounded in a bomb explosion in an outdoor market in Baghdad’s western suburb of Abu Ghraib, another police officer said.

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In an online statement, Islamic State, also known as Isis, claimed responsibility for the Kadhimiyah attack, saying it targeted a gathering of security forces and Shia militia members.

Security forces and public areas, mainly in Shia neighbourhoods, are one of the most frequent targets for the extremist group, which controls key areas in mainly northern and western Iraq.

Since late last year, the group has suffered a string of territorial losses, most recently last month in Falluja, where it was driven out by Iraqi forces after occupying the city for more than two years.

The extremists have continued to carry out near-daily bombings in and around Baghdad as well as complex attacks in other countries.

PA