Two blasts in central Baghdad kill at least 28 — police

Iraqi security forces inspect the site of a bomb attack at a market in central Baghdad. (REUTERS)

BAGHDAD: Two bombs exploded at a busy market in central Baghdad on Saturday, killing at least 28 people and wounding more than 54, police and medics said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Daesh regularly attacks civilians in the Iraqi capital.
Police said the blasts went off near car parts shops in Sinak neighborhood during the morning rush. One of them was triggered by a suicide bomber, the other was a planted explosive, an Interior Ministry official told Reuters.
Civilians picked through the debris of the explosions including a food cart torn apart by the blast as medics carried off the casualties.
Daesh has lost much of the northern and western territory it seized in 2014 and is now resisting an Iraqi offensive on the northern city of Mosul, the ultra-hard-line group’s last major stronghold in the country.
Iraqi forces faced fierce resistance from the militants in southern Mosul on Friday, while troops in the city’s east and north cleared areas they had recaptured a day earlier.