The bombings came a day after a series of attacks targeted commercial streets, killing at least 31 people in the latest chapter in the country's months-long, spiralling violence. More than 4,000 people have been killed in Iraq since April, including 804 just in August, according to UN figures.
Despite a counter-insurgency operation recently launched by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's Shiite-led government, there has been no significant dent in the pace of attacks.
In a televised weekly speech, al-Maliki appealed to Iraqis to support the operation.
"The operation must continue and accelerate to chase down the criminal and terrorist gangs," he said. "I call upon all citizens, politicians and journalists to support the security forces in their effort to continue pressuring and chasing down the terrorists."
Today's attacks started with a suicide bomber who blew up his explosives-laden vehicle in the ethnically mixed town of Tuz Khormato, killing a civilian and a five-year old child, said police chief Col Hussein Ali Rasheed. Twenty-six people were wounded in the attack, he added.
In Baghdad, a parked car bomb exploded in a commercial area in the central Bataween area, killing one person and wounding five people, a police officer said. That explosion was followed by another car bombing in the same area that left three dead and 10 wounded, he added.
A medical official confirmed the causality figures in Baghdad. Both officials spoke anonymously as they were not authorised to release information.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks but car bombs and suicide bombings bear the hallmarks of al-Qaeda's local branch, known as the Islamic State of Iraq, which is trying to undermine confidence in al-Maliki's government.
Although overall death tolls are still lower than at the height of the conflict in 2004-2008, the cycle of violence is reminiscent to the one that brought the country to the brink of civil war in 2006-2007.
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