A series of bombings in Iraq, including twin blasts in a busy street in a Baghdad suburb, have killed at least 31 people and wounded dozens, officials say.
The deadliest attack, shortly before sunset, came when a bomb exploded in Baghdad's southeastern suburb of Jisr Diyala, while a car bomb went off near the site of the first blast minutes later, as people started gathering to help the victims.
Police and hospital officials put the casualty toll in Jisr Diyala at up to 16 killed and 30 wounded, including several students who had just come out of a nearby school after class.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings but Iraq sees near-daily attacks, mostly by Sunni insurgents targeting the country's Shi'ite majority and security forces.
The attacks are often claimed by the Islamic State group, which seized about a third of the country in a blitz last year, along with a swath of territory in neighbouring Syria.
Earlier on Tuesday, a parked car bomb went off in a commercial area in the town of Mishada, 30 kilometres north of Baghdad, killing at least four civilians and wounding 12, police officials said.
In Baghdad's northwestern Shula neighbourhood, a bomb exploded near a restaurant, killing three civilians and wounding eight, they said.
Another bomb also killed three civilians and wounded nine in a commercial area in Youssifiyah, 20 kilometres south of Baghdad.
Two more civilians were killed and seven others were wounded when a bomb struck an outdoor market in Latifiyah, about 30 kilometres south of Baghdad. Another bomb hit a police patrol in Madain, about 20 kilometres southeast of Baghdad, killing a police officer and a civilian and wounding five people.
And in Baghdad's northern Shaab neighbourhood, a bomb blast killed one civilian and wounded five.
Medical officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the casualty figures from all attacks.
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