The surge in unrest comes as Iraq grapples with months of protests by the Sunni Arab community and protracted political deadlock.
Analysts warn there may be no respite before general elections next year.
Attacks today struck in Mosul, Dawr, Sharqat and Hilla, killing four people and wounding eight, while officials also found the bodies of two men who had been shot in Sharqat.
A 17-year-old girl killed by a roadside bomb near Dawr, north of Baghdad, was among the dead.
More than 1,000 people died in unrest across Iraq in April and May.
However, figures compiled by the United Nations are higher still, pegging the death toll for April and May at more than 1,750.
Iraq has seen a rise in violence since the beginning of the year, coinciding with rallies among the Sunni Arab minority against what demonstrators see as discrimination and the authorities targeting them.
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