Militants have detonated a car bomb at the Tikrit city council headquarters and occupied the building with employees inside, as violence across Iraq left 24 people dead, officials say.
The city council assault, which came on Monday hours after another by suicide bombers on a police station, illustrates the impunity with which militants in Iraq can strike even targets that should be highly secure.
Violence in Iraq has reached a level not seen since 2008, when the country was emerging from a period of brutal sectarian killings, raising fears it is slipping back into all-out conflict.
Security forces from both the army and police deployed around the city council building in Tikrit, near the village of late dictator Saddam Hussein north of Baghdad, an AFP journalist said.
Security forces also ordered all government employees in the city, including teachers, to go home for the day.
The attack came after suicide bombers attacked a police station in the town of Baiji, which like Tikrit is located in Salaheddin province.
One bomber detonated a car bomb at the gate of the station, after which three entered, shot dead two police, and waited at the station.
SWAT forces then attacked, killing one of the militants, while the other two blew themselves up, killing three more police.
And gunmen killed three soldiers guarding an oil pipeline in Tikrit.
Also on Monday, four car bombs and a magnetic "sticky bomb" on a vehicle exploded in and around the Iraqi capital, killing at least 15 people and wounding at least 38 - the second series of blasts in the area in 24 hours.
In one of the deadliest attacks, a car bomb exploded in a car park near the Baghdad provincial council headquarters, killing at least four people and wounding at least 11.
The attacks came after another series of bombings in and around Baghdad killed at least nine people.
And violence elsewhere in the country on Monday killed a further 11 people, among them a TV presenter and a family of five.
Officials have blamed the violence on Al-Qaeda-linked militants emboldened by the civil war in neighbouring Syria, but analysts and diplomats also say the government has not done enough to address underlying domestic grievances fuelling the violence.
Members of the country's Sunni minority, who complain of discrimination at the hands of the Shi'ite-led government, have held demonstrations for almost a year.
Share
