Authorities have launched a fierce crackdown on militants blamed for a wave of nationwide shootings and blasts that has killed more than 3,600 people this year, but have faced criticism for not addressing the root causes of the violence.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has nevertheless vowed to press on with the campaign, even as analysts and diplomats have voiced fears that Iraq is teetering on the edge of a return to the all-out sectarian war that left tens of thousands dead in 2006 and 2007.
In the worst attack, a suicide bomber detonated explosives in a small park in the confessionally-mixed north Baghdad neighbourhood of Qahira, where families were gathered in the evening.
The blast -- like many recent ones targeting crowded areas to inflict maximum casualties -- killed at least 28 people and wounded 58 others, security and medical officials said.
"This morning, there was a funeral for 30 people and many, many others were wounded, and most of them will die because nobody cares about them," said one of the mourners, Sharif Mohammed.
Nine other attacks in Baghdad, Mosul, Dujail and Hilla killed nine people yesterday.
Maliki issued two statements on violence in Lebanon and Syria yesterday but made no mention of the unrest plaguing Iraq.
The violence came as authorities announced the latest in a series of operations launched following brazen assaults on prisons near Baghdad last month, claimed by an Al-Qaeda front group, that officials say enabled hundreds of prisoners to flee, including several senior militants.
Security forces arrested seven militants in north Iraq, a statement from a joint army-police command centre said, including the self-styled minister of finance of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, an Al-Qaeda front group.
Maliki, who has vowed to pursue suspects across Iraq, said in a recent speech that dozens of militants were killed and more than 800 alleged militants arrested as a result of the operations.
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