Six car bombs hit Baghdad as US lawmakers slam Maliki
Five people killed as bombings follow spate of attacks in Iraqi capital on Wednesday that left 33 dead

Six car bombs ripped through Baghdad killing five people on Thursday, hours after American lawmakers criticised the slow pace of political reconciliation which they blamed for high levels of violence.
The blasts, which mostly targeted Shiite-majority neighbourhoods of the Iraqi capital, come amid the country’s worst protracted period of unrest since 2008 as security forces grapple with near-daily attacks and battles with anti-government fighters in Anbar province.
Diplomats and analysts have called for the Shiite-led government to do more to reach out to disaffected Sunnis, but with parliamentary elections looming in April, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has taken a hard line.
The bloodshed has continued unabated, with half a dozen car bombs going off across Baghdad from about 5pm Hong Kong time onwards.
In all, they killed at least five people and left 38 others wounded, according to security and medical officials.
Four of the neighbourhoods hit are populated mostly by Iraq’s Shiite majority, while the other two were in the commercial Karrada district of central Baghdad. Three of the blasts targeted market areas.