In Madain, south of Baghdad, a bomb exploded near a football field inside a sports club today, killing at least five people.
And gunmen attacked a checkpoint on a highway in northern Iraq, sparking clashes that killed three anti-Al-Qaeda fighters and two militants.
The anti-Al-Qaeda fighters, known as Sahwa, are a collection of Sunni tribal militias that turned against Al-Qaeda and sided with the US military from late 2006 onwards, helping turn the tide against Iraq's bloody insurgency.
A car bomb in the northern city of Mosul also killed one person and wounded four.
Yesterday night, gunmen killed a policeman, his father, his wife and three children as they drove south of Baghdad on their way back from a wedding.
And gunmen shot dead two police in an attack on a checkpoint in Tikrit, north of the capital.
With the latest violence, over 180 people have been killed in unrest in the first eight days of July -- far more than in the whole month of December, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.
