(Reuters) - Five
blasts across Baghdad on Saturday tempered Iraqis' anticipation of a
more relaxed and accessible capital as the government prepared to lift a
night-time curfew that has kept the city on a war-time footing for more
than a decade. At least 37 people,
mostly civilians, were killed in the explosions, security and medical
sources said, and dozens of others were wounded. The
attacks included a suicide bombing at a restaurant in a Shi'ite
neighborhood and improvised explosives devices planted in a bustling
central market district, underscoring the peril ordinary people still
face from militant violence in Baghdad. Bombings
have waned and waxed for nearly 12 years, but they have not ceased
since the U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein in 2003. Ending the curfew and "demilitarizing" several neighborhoods is part of a campaign to normalize life in Iraq's
war-blighted capital. Officials hope to demonstrate that Baghdad no
longer faces a threat from Islamic State, the militant group which
seized large areas of northern and western Iraq last year. Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi, a moderate Shi'ite Islamist who took office
in September, has struggled to develop a broad support base. Improving
quality of life in Baghdad could represent a small but tangible
achievement as he seeks to turn back the tide against Islamic State
while mending rifts between polarized sectarian communities that have
stoked violence. "This
will benefit us greatly, because we have felt imprisoned for the past 11
years," a shopper in the central Karrada district said hours before the
curfew was set to end. "This is the bravest decision that Haider al-Abadi has taken. This shows that the country is somewhat safe." Interior
ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan said he did not believe
Saturday's explosions were linked to the government's decision this week
to lift the midnight (1600 ET) to 5 a.m. curfew on Saturday at
midnight. Security forces
pressed ahead with plans to end the curfew, setting up mobile
checkpoints to forestall bombings and criminal acts like kidnapping,
which has became more common since last summer. STILL CAUTIOUS The
curfew has become a fact of life in Baghdad, as have the towering gray
blast walls around many buildings and checkpoints that have curtailed
commercial and civilian movement. Residents
often complain of having to wait in long lines of traffic at
checkpoints on major roads and at the entrances to many neighborhoods,
while politicians' convoys speed through the city with armed guards. Last week's decisions mean heavy weapons will be banned from specified districts and some checkpoints closed. Residents awaited the end of the curfew on Saturday evening with a mixture of anticipation and fear. The
bombings earlier in the day and in recent weeks reinforced fears among
some that the end of the curfew would spark more attacks. "You
can see that things are not as good as before. Bombings are coming
back," said Anwar, 25, a shop owner in Shourja, near the site of
Saturday's market blast. A
former soldier in the eastern Adhamiya district criticized the decision
to lift the curfew, saying it would give criminal gangs more freedom to
operate. "They couldn't control them at day, what about night-time?" he said, declining to be named. Others, though still cautious, were taking advantage of having one of Baghdad's many restraints eliminated. "Removing
the curfew is bad because it strains the security forces and we have to
be more alert now," said a volunteer paramilitary fighter outside a
night club on the banks of the Tigris River. "I'm taking my leave now so I come here for a few hours of relief and to forget that I have to go to work again."
As Baghdad lifts curfew, bombs are reminder of country at war

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