There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks but
the area, which was nearly overrun by Islamic State militants in 2014,
remains around 40 km from a frontline held by Shi'ite militiamen.
Three gunmen opened fire overnight on a cafe in northern Iraq
where young men had gathered at the start of the weekend, killing at
least 12 and wounding 25, police and hospital sources said on Friday.
The assailants in the predominately Shi'ite Muslim town of Balad, 80 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, sprayed machine gun fire from their cars for around 10 minutes before speeding off.
Hours
later a suicide bomber set off his explosive vest at a nearby vegetable
market after police and Shi'ite militia members cornered him in a
disused building and exchanged gunfire, security sources said. Four were
killed and two critically wounded, medical sources added.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks but the area, which was nearly overrun by Islamic State militants in 2014, remains around 40 km from a frontline held by Shi'ite militiamen.
The
attackers had passed three police checkpoints before reaching their
target, said police sources who declined to be identified as they were
not authorised to speak to the media.
Security forces deployed throughout the town on Friday morning, fearing more attacks.
An
intelligence source said fighters from the powerful Iranian-backed Badr
Organisation raided a nearby house and detained 13 members of a Sunni
family. There were reports of gunfire in an adjacent orchard.
Iraqi
authorities have come under heightened criticism over security breaches
that allowed suicide attackers to set off three bombs on Wednesday in
Baghdad, killing at least 80 people in the bloodiest day in the capital
so far this year.
The country is also facing a
political crisis over a cabinet overhaul that has crippled government
for weeks and threatens to undermine the U.S.-backed war against Islamic
State, which still controls swathes of territory in the north and west
which it seized in 2014.
The fight against the
ultra-hardline Sunni militants has exacerbated a sectarian conflict in
Iraq, mostly between the Sunni minority and the Shi'ite majority, which
emerged after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
One
of the shooting victims, a 22-year-old named Tahseen, told a doctor at
Balad Hospital he had been smoking a water pipe when a man wearing
civilian clothes and a bandolier filled with ammunition crossed the
street towards the cafe. He described several blasts, likely from stun
bombs, amid the shooting.
Unverified photographs
of the shooting site published by a local news website showed a laptop
splayed on the floor of al-Furat Cafe amid piles of blood. A long streak
of blood suggested one of the victims had been dragged out past couches
where they had been relaxing moments earlier.
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