Iraqi officials: Suicide bombings in eastern Mosul kill 5
BAGHDAD — Two suicide bombings in the eastern half of the Iraqi city of Mosul, including one that hit a popular restaurant, killed at least five people on Friday and wounded over a dozen others, Iraqi military and medical officials said.
The Islamic State group, which still firmly controls western Mosul, a more densely populated urban area, claimed responsibility for the attacks.
Late Friday, a parked car packed with explosives detonated on a commercial street in the Alam district of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, killing six civilians and wounding 18, police and hospital officials said.
Iraqi forces declared eastern Mosul liberated from IS weeks ago, allowing for a semblance of normalcy to slowly return to that part of the city — including residents playing soccer games and walking about without the restrictions imposed by the Sunni militant group. IS had ruled the entire city and large swaths of northern and western Iraq for over two years, imposing its harsh interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia.


