BAGHDAD, Iraq
Seven people have been killed and 24 injured in four separate blasts in Iraqi capital Baghdad on Sunday, according to Iraqi security officials.
Earlier, twelve people were killed and 29 others injured in a suicide bomb blast in central Baghdad.
The attack came as Iraq continues to suffer from increased sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims, which the Iraqi government has blamed on the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant - ISIL.
A security official told Anadolu Agency: "The suicide bomber, wearing an explosive belt, blew himself up at noon today, near the shrine of Sheikh Abdul Qadir Al-Gilani, killing 12 civilians and wounding 29 others."
He said the shrine was frequented by Shia muslims in central Baghdad and security forces had cordoned off the scene and transferred the bodies of the dead and injured to a nearby hospital.
Baghdad has recently been hit by a series of violence, including car bombs and improvised explosives, resulting in the death and injury of dozens of citizens and members of the security forces.
Tal Afar: clashes resumed
A tribal source said clashes resumed in northwestern Tal Afar between ISIL militants and security forces backed by Turkmen tribal fighters, leading to hundreds of families fleeing the city.
Earlier Sunday, ten civilians were killed and 40 injured in a mortar attack, believed to have been carried out by ISIL militants, according to a medical source.
Turkmen tribesmen, who constitute the majority in the city, formed vigilante groups after ISIL forces seized the provincial capital, Mosul.
On Friday, Some 8,000 Turkmen fighters have already joined the Iraqi army's ranks to fight ISIL militants, according to a tribal source.
The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Anadolu Agency: "Youths from the tribes are doing joint patrols with Iraqi security forces inside and outside the city of Tal Afar to counter any possible attack from ISIL."
Al-Maliki
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said on Sunday that Iraqi forces regained "the initiative and began to crawl against ISIL forces." He was speaking to a crowd of volunteer fighters in Baghdad's southern district Mahmudiya.
”Some political failures in Iraq and other states are supporting ISIL group," said Maliki.
Addressing the volunteers, he said “your mission does not end by purging ISIL militants and pro-ISIL politicians, your mission is the formation of the Iraqi army."
Earlier on Sunday, Iraqi national security adviser Faleh Alfayadh announced that Al-Maliki had ordered the creation of a system for recruiting civilians to fight against radical militants who have seized control of northern parts of the country.
Alfayadh said the Directorate for Civilian Recruitment would arm volunteers for "jihad against terrorism" and denied reports that Iranian "Quds forces" -- a special unit of the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guard -- had entered the country to support Iraqi security forces.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant militants, which developed into a formidable force inside Syria, extended its reach in Iraq after gaining near-complete control of the northern Iraqi city of Tikrit and seizing Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city on Tuesday.
The group seized large swathes of western Iraq’s Anbar Province in January, including much of Fallujah and parts of Ramadi, flashpoints of the US-led war in 2003.
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