At least 33 people have been killed in three separate bomb attacks in Iraq.
In the worst incident, 23 Iraqi army recruits were killed and another 27 were injured while travelling in a lorry on a road near Baghdad.
Earlier, six people were killed by a car bomb parked on a busy shopping street in central Baghdad, and two more people died in a second blast in the capital.
Seven people were injured in the first attack, in the mainly Shia district of Karrada.
The second car bomb was near a hotel used by westerners in the southern neighbourhood of Jadriya.
Five people were injured in that attack, near the al-Hamra hotel, although the hotel itself was not targetted.
Earlier, officials said the death toll from yesterday's truck bomb attack in a market in the northern Iraqi town of Tuz Khurmato may be as high as 150.
130 people have now been confirmed dead, with 250 injured. But police said 20 people were still missing and presumed dead.
The truck bomb destroyed about 50 small shops and 50 houses in the largely Shia town.
The Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki described yesterday's bombing in northern Iraq that killed 130 people and injured 240 as a "heinous crime".
Rescuers are still searching for survivors of the attack in Amirli.
Mr Maliki has blamed insurgents for the attack, saying their actions were showing signs of desperation.