At least 15 people killed after two bombs explode in Baghdad

Attacks follow wave of bombings on Saturday in which 37 people died

Iraqis celebrate  the lift of curfew in central Baghdad at the weekend. A wave of violence has hit the city since Saturday, despite the government lifting the longstanding curfew aimed at normalising life in the city. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Iraqis celebrate the lift of curfew in central Baghdad at the weekend. A wave of violence has hit the city since Saturday, despite the government lifting the longstanding curfew aimed at normalising life in the city. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

At least 15 people were killed in two bombings in and around Baghdad on Monday, police and medical sources said, the latest in a string of deadly attacks to hit the Iraqi capital in the last two weeks.

A suicide bombing at a security checkpoint in the Shia neighbourhood of Kadhimiya killed 13 civilians and wounded more than 30 others, the sources said.

The neighbourhood is home to one of the holiest shrines in Shia Islam and is the regular target of such attacks.

Two people were later killed when a bomb went off on a main street in a northern suburb, police and medical sources said.

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No person or group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings. Islamic State, an al Qaeda offshoot that seized large parts of northern and western Iraq last year, regularly targets Shia neighbourhoods in the capital.

At least 37 people were killed in a wave of bombings on Saturday.

Despite the violence, the government lifted a longstanding night-time curfew on Saturday night aimed at normalising life in the war-torn city.

Agencies