BAGHDAD, Jan 7: Two suicide bombers struck in a Sunni Arab district of Baghdad on Monday, killing at least 14 people including the leader of a US-backed neighbourhood security patrol, police said.

The strikes were the latest in an apparent stepped-up campaign of suicide bombings that has seen major attacks nearly every day for the past two weeks, even as overall levels of violence in Iraq have fallen.

Chanting mourners carried the bodies of Colonel Riyadh al-Samarrai and some of his slain bodyguards through the streets of the mainly Sunni Arab Adhamiya neighbourhood, where the colonel led volunteer patrols in the pay of US forces.

“The martyrdom of the colonel is an inspiration to us now. All of us will become Colonel Riyadhs,” said Abu Firas, another senior member of the “awakening” movement in the area, the Iraqi name for Sunni Arab tribes that have turned against Al Qaeda.

Three separate police and security sources confirmed the death toll and said about 20 people were wounded. Baghdad security spokesman Brigadier-General Qassim Moussawi told Iraqiya state television six people were killed and 26 wounded.

One of the bombers detonated an explosive vest, the other struck with a car bomb.

Samarrai was also in charge of security at the Adhamiya headquarters of the Sunni Endowment, an institution that runs Sunni mosques and religious offices in Iraq.

The Endowment said the attack was part of “a conspiracy against this country, the blood of which continues to flow”.

Other blasts in Baghdad killed five people, including a bomb hidden in a market cart that killed four in the central Karrada district and a pair of roadside bombs that killed a civilian and wounded two policemen in southern Jadiriya district.—Reuters

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