At least 51 people were killed in Iraq on Friday as the country continues to slip into sectarian violence while the year’s death toll, already in the thousands, continues to spiral upwards.
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violence in 2013.
The majority of the victims came from a series of kidnappings in
Baghdad and nearby towns, which saw people taken from their homes
and executed, with their corpses later abandoned, authorities
told AFP.
Police discovered
the bodies of 18 males in the early morning, including two tribal
chiefs, four policemen and an army major, dumped in farmland near
the Sunni Arab town of Tarmiyah, just north of the capital.
Another similar incident took place in Salaheddin province where
seven men, who were employed as maintenance workers at a local
football pitch, were found dead with their throats cut.
Three more female corpses were discovered in the capital -- the
women were apparently tortured before being shot in the head.
Also on Friday, separate attacks in and around Baghdad and Sunni
Arab towns of Mosul, Baquba and Kirkuk killed another 23 people,
officials said.
Among the incidents was a bombing of a football pitch in the west
of the capital that left five dead, and a gun attack against a
brothel in Baghdad’s east that left six people dead.
Friday's killings cap a week in which more than 200 people were
killed throughout parts of the country.
Violence in Iraq has seen a drastic increase since April, when
the Shiite-led authorities stormed a Sunni protest camp in the
north of the country, which resulted in multiple casualties.
The Iraqi government has recently stepped up its efforts to
tackle Al-Qaeda in the country, but it does not seem to be enough
as terrorist attacks continue on a daily basis.
This year has already seen over 7,000 Iraqis killed, according to
the Iraq Body Count project, making 2013 the bloodiest period
since 2006-07, when tens of thousands perished in sectarian
violence.