Commanders killed in Iraq funeral blast

Shi'ite militia commanders are among the dead following a suicide attack at a funeral in eastern Iraq, which is expected to raise sectarian tensions.

At least 40 people have been killed by a suicide bomber at a funeral in Iraq's eastern province of Diyala, while a suicide blast at a security checkpoint in Baghdad's western outskirts has killed eight members of the security forces.

The larger attack in Muqdadiya, 80km northeast of Baghdad, killed six local commanders of the Hashid Shaabi umbrella group of Shi'ite militias who were attending the funeral of a commander's relative, security officials and police in Diyala said.

A further 58 people were wounded, the sources said.

Islamic State, an ultra-hardline Sunni group that controls large parts of northern and western Iraq, claimed responsibility for the blast, according to a statement posted on the SITE monitoring group's Twitter account.

The killing of the commanders, four of whom were from the Asaib Ahl al-Haq militia and two from the Badr Organisation, is likely to inflame sectarian tensions in the mixed province.

Security officials and witnesses said the situation inside Muqdadiya was tense, with dozens of Shi'ite militia members out on the streets but few security forces.

The town's police chief was wounded in clashes with militia fighters who had tried to seize suspected Islamic State militants from a prison in Muqdadiya, police sources said.

Militia elements have been accused of attacking Sunni Muslim mosques and residents in Diyala following similar bombings in January, but the groups have denied the allegations and blamed Islamic State.

Iraqi officials declared victory over the Sunni insurgents in Diyala a year ago. While it no longer controls significant territory in the eastern province bordering Iran, Islamic State has remained active there.

A separate attack in the western Baghdad outskirts of Abu Ghraib followed an offensive by Islamic State militants on army and police positions in the same area on Sunday that left 24 people dead but was eventually repelled by counter-terrorism forces and army attack helicopters.

Monday's blasts follow the deadliest bombing inside the capital so far in 2016, which killed 78 people in a Shi'ite district on Sunday.


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Source: AAP


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