Attacks in Iraq on Sunday killed six people, including three soldiers and a judge, officials said, as authorities struggle to contain the worst violence to hit the country in five years.
Attacks in Iraq on Sunday killed six people, including three soldiers and a judge, officials said, as authorities struggle to contain the worst violence to hit the country in five years.
Militants opposed to the Iraqi government frequently attack security forces and other government employees with both bombs and gunfire.
The soldiers were killed by a roadside bomb that exploded near their patrol in the northern province of Nineveh on Sunday morning.
The blast, which struck about 60 kilometers south of the provincial capital Mosul, also wounded four soldiers.
And another bombing targeted a police patrol farther south, wounding three policemen.
In Tikrit, north of Baghdad, a car bomb exploded near a judge's house, killing him and severely wounding his wife, while another blast in the Iraqi capital itself killed one person and wounded five.
And gunmen killed a man and wounded his son west of the northern city of Kirkuk.
The attacks came a day after violence killed 24 people, including nine soldiers.
Violence has increased markedly this year, especially since an April 23 security operation at an anti-government protest site that sparked clashes in which dozens died.
Protests erupted in Iraq late 2012, amid widespread discontent among minorities who accuse the government of marginalizing and targeting their community.