Suicide car bombers kill 11 at Baghdad police stations
Two suicide attackers detonated their explosives-packed vehicles just minutes apart at police stations in Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 11 people, security officials said.
At least 42 others were wounded in the twin blasts at around 8:30 am (0530 GMT) in Hurriyah, north Baghdad, and Al-Wiyah, in the centre of the capital, according to officials from the ministries of interior and defence.
The interior ministry official said the two attacks killed 11 people and wounded 48 others, while the defence ministry official put the toll at 15 dead and 42 injured.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity. The apparently coordinated attacks were the worst to hit the capital since August 28, when a suicide attack blamed on Al-Qaeda at Baghdad's biggest Sunni mosque killed 28 people.
Three other incidents across the capital on Wednesday -- a car bomb, a silenced pistol attack on a checkpoint and a magnetic 'sticky bomb' attached to a car -- left seven others wounded, including a police brigadier general and two other policemen, the interior ministry official said.
Despite a decline in violence nationwide since its peak in 2006 and 2007, attacks remain common. A total of 185 Iraqis were killed in violence in September, according to official figures.
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