A string predominantly Shiite Muslim provinces in Iraq bombings, killing at least 24 people were killed, police and medical officials said.
Violence is an ongoing activity, militant attacks this year have prompted a wider conflict, the Kurdish and Shiite and Sunni Muslim countries have yet to find a stable power-sharing compromise concerns.
A suicide bomber at a Shiite mosque in the town of Mussayab, killing at least four people were killed, Kut city, a car bomb in a busy market to go, killing five people, police and medical officials said.
In the southern oil hub of Basra, 420 kilometers southeast of Baghdad (260 miles) near the headquarters of the Shiite parties three bombs exploded in quick succession, killing at least eight people were killed, police said.
"In the first explosion occurred, I ran to evacuate the victims, I saw the charred bodies of two or three former police asked me to step back and said:" who gave his name only Allah alone. "When the police forced me to move out, the second explosion happened."
Two car bombs in the market to Nasiriyah, 300 kilometers (185 miles) southeast of Baghdad, killing two people. Police said another car bomb killed four Shiite holy city of Karbala, 80 kilometers (50 miles), southwest of Baghdad in a busy market.
It is not clear who was behind Sunday's explosions, but Sunni Islamist insurgents, including the "base" organization affiliated Islamic State of Iraq, has been regaining strength in recent months, security sources said.
Inflamed sectarian tensions in neighboring Syria has civil war, is fast becoming a region-wide proxy war in Iraq and elsewhere in the Shiite and Sunni fighters learn to play both sides of the conflict.
Saturday, two Sunni mosques in Baghdad bombings killed at least 23 near death, who had come to Ramadan prayers after breaking their daily fast.
So far, more than 300 people were killed in July, according to the violence monitoring group Iraq Body Count.
Bloodshed has sparked fears that Iraq once again into full-scale conflict, although it has no matching sectarian massacre of 2006-07 monthly death tolls, sometimes exceeded 3,000.
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