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By Kareem Raheem

BAGHDAD, Feb 25 (Reuters) – A parked car bomb blew up by a

crowded Baghdad market on Tuesday night, killing at least 14

people and bringing the day’s total death toll in political

violence around Iraq to 26, security and medical sources said.

The bomb went off in a side street in the Shi’ite district

of Karaada in eastern Baghdad. It set cars on fire, shattered

windows, tore apart stalls and demolished some storefronts.

Security forces fired off a fusillade of warning shots in the

blast’s aftermath. At least 14 people were killed and 45

wounded, medical and security officials said.

Baghdad has been hit by wave after wave of bombings since

April as the precarious peace enjoyed since the end of Iraq’s

sectarian war in 2008 has unravelled.

In western Anbar province, where government forces are

fighting rebellious Sunni tribes and an al Qaeda splinter group,

the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, three soldiers were

killed and 18 others wounded when a car bomb rammed into the

entrance of the governor’s compound in the provincial capital

Ramadi, according to medical and security sources.

Elsewhere, gunmen speeding in a car killed three policemen

by a police checkpoint west of the oil refinery town of Baiji in

northern Iraq. Most Sunni areas in central and northern Iraq

have seen violence erupt as relations between the Shi’ite-led

government in Baghdad and the Sunni minority have deteriorated.

In the town of Himreen in eastern Diyala province, riven by

sectarian violence since last summer, a car bomb went off near a

crowded market and killed three people, police sources said.

Another three young men were killed when gunmen opened fire on

them in Diyala’s capital Baquba, police said.

(Reporting by Kareem Raheem and Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad and

Ghazwan Hassan in Tikrit; Editing by Ned Parker and Andrew

Roche)