A wave of attacks across Iraq on Monday killed 111 people in the country's deadliest day in two and a half years after al Qaeda warned it would mount new attacks and sought to retake territory. Officials said at least 235 people were wounded in 28 different attacks launched in 19 cities, shattering a relative calm which had held in the lead-up to the start on Saturday of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.
The violence drew condemnation from the United Nations special envoy to Iraq, the country's parliament speaker, and neighbouring Iran. In Monday's deadliest attack - a string of roadside bombs and a car bomb followed by a suicide attack targeting emergency responders in the town of Taji - at least 42 people were killed and 40 wounded, according to two medical officials.
"I heard explosions in the distance so I left my house and I saw a car outside," said 40-year-old Taji resident Abu Mohammed, who added that police inspectors concluded the vehicle was a car bomb. "We asked the neighbours to leave their houses, but when they were leaving, the bomb went off." Abu Mohammed said he witnessed the deaths of an elderly woman carrying a new-born baby and of the policeman who had first concluded the car was packed with explosives.
An AFP reporter at the scene said a row of houses were completely destroyed, and residents were rummaging through the rubble in search of victims and their belongings. In Baghdad, meanwhile, a car bomb outside a government office responsible for producing identity papers in the Shia bastion of Sadr City killed at least 12 people and wounded 33 others, security and medical officials said.
"This attack is a terrible crime against humanity, because they did it during Ramadan, while people are fasting," said one elderly witness who declined to be identified. An AFP journalist said eight nearby cars were badly burned and many of the victims of the 9:30 am (0630 GMT) attack could not be identified because their papers were inside the targeted offices.
Two explosions in the Baghdad neighbourhoods of Husseiniyah and Yarmuk killed at least four people and wounded 27 others, while a car bomb in the town of Tarmiyah, just north of the capital, killed one and hurt nine, officials said. Checkpoint shootings and bomb blasts in restive ethnically-mixed Diyala province killed 14 people and left 47 others wounded, security officials and doctor Ahmed Ibrahim from the main hospital in provincial capital Baquba said.
Insurgents also launched attacks on a military base near the town of Dhuluiyah, killing at least 15 soldiers and leaving two others wounded, according to security officials. Two other attacks in the same province - a checkpoint shooting and a car bomb near a Shiite mosque - left three people dead and six wounded, officials said.
Nine bomb blasts, some of them minutes apart, meanwhile killed seven people and wounded 29 in Kirkuk city and the eponymous province's towns of Dibis and Tuz Khurmatu. Three different attacks - a car bomb, a roadside blast and a shooting - in the main northern city of Mosul and the nearby town of Baaj left nine people dead and seven wounded, according to Iraqi army First Lieutenant Waad Mohammed and police Lieutenant Mohammed al-Juburi.
A roadside bomb at a market in the centre of the town of Diwaniyah, south of Baghdad, killed three people and hurt 25, provincial health chief Adnan Turki said. In the western town of Heet, a car bomb exploded near an army patrol, killing one soldier and wounding 10 others, according to an Iraqi army captain and doctor Abdulwahab al-Shammari from the town hospital.
The attacks came a day after a spate of bombings across Iraq killed at least 17 people and wounded nearly 100 others. Monday's toll was the highest since December 8, 2009, when 127 people were killed. The latest violence comes after the country suffered a spike in unrest in June when at least 282 people were killed, according to an AFP tally based on figures supplied by officials and medics.
Although those figures are markedly lower than during the peak of Iraq's communal bloodshed from 2006 to 2008, attacks remain common. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Monday's attacks, but al Qaeda's front group in Iraq has warned in recent days that it seeks to retake territory in the country.
The Islamic State of Iraq warned in an audio message posted on jihadist forums that it would begin targeting judges and prosecutors, and appealed for the help of Sunni tribes in its quest to recapture territory it once held. "We are starting a new stage," said the voice on the message, purportedly that of ISI leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. "The first priority in this is releasing Muslim prisoners everywhere, and chasing and eliminating judges and investigators and their guards."
It was not possible to verify whether the voice was that of Baghdadi. The speaker added: "On the occasion of the beginning of the return of the state to the areas that we left, I urge you to carry out more efforts, and send your sons with the mujahedeen to defend your religion and obey God."