The deadliest attack took place in the town of Youssifiyah just south of Baghdad, when gunmen stormed a house and shot dead two women and four men as they were ritually cleansing the body of a Sunni man ahead of his funeral, said police.
In the nearby town of Latifiyah, a bomb hidden inside a coffee shop killed four and wounded 14, a police officer said.
Youssifiyah and Latifiyah, 20 kilometers and 30 kilometers from the capital respectively, were known after the US-led invasion for sectarian violence and dubbed the Triangle of Death. Militants continue to stage attacks in the area, and last week gunmen killed 16 people in an attack on Shiite families in Latifiyah.
In the capital, shortly before sunset, a bomb exploded near a soccer field in the southeastern Shiite-majority suburb of Nahrwan, killing three people and wounding 14 others, police said.
And in the northern city of Mosul, according to police, one person was killed when a sticky bomb attached to his car exploded.
Medical officials in nearby hospitals confirmed the figures. All officials provided details of the violence on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to release information.
The head of the Iraqi Civil Aviation Authority, Nassir Bandar, said the shutdown was done for maintenance reasons. A senior intelligence official cited unspecified technical matters, while an airport official and said the move was for security reasons.
The latter two officials spoke anonymously as they were not authorised to discuss the matter publicly. Mosul, also a former insurgent stronghold, is about 360 kilometers northwest of Baghdad.
No one claimed immediate responsibility for the attacks. But coordinated car bombings and attacks on civilians and security forces are a favourite tactic of the Iraqi branch of al-Qaida. It typically does not lay claim to attacks for several days, if at all.
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