Two suicide bombers wearing vests stuffed with explosives blew themselves up in separate attacks in Iraq today, killing 28 people in Baghdad and 48, most of them thought to be Iranian pilgrims, north of the capital, police said.
The blast in central Baghdad took place as a group of Iraqi national police were distributing relief supplies to Iraqis who had been driven from their homes during the sectarian bloodshed and insurgency unleashed by the 2003 US-led invasion.
Fifty people were wounded and at least five children were among the dead, police said.
"It is a suicide bomber. Obviously that has the fingerprints of al Qaeda," said Baghdad security spokesman Major-General Qassim Moussawi.
The second attack occurred near Muqdadiya, 80km northeast of Baghdad, in the volatile northeastern province of Diyala. The suicide bomber appeared to have targeted a group of Iranian pilgrims in a restaurant.
Most of the 48 dead were believed to be Iranians visiting Shi'ite Muslim religious sites in Iraq, police said. Seventy-seven people were wounded.
Violence across Iraq has fallen sharply over the past year, but insurgents such as al-Qaeda still carry out regular attacks. Suicide bombings are often associated with al-Qaeda.
A suicide bomber yesterday killed at least five people and wounded 15 inside a mosque in central Iraq, and on Monday, a suicide bomber in a police uniform killed four policemen in Diyala. Eight US soldiers were wounded.
Some expect violence to increase as rival political and armed groups position themselves ahead of a national election due to take place at the end of the year.
Iraqi officials say al-Qaeda and other groups are also likely to try to increase their attacks as US forces prepare to pull out of Iraqi cities by the end of June this year, ahead of a full withdrawal by the end of 2011.