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Residents urged to give blood after scores killed by IS truck bomb in Iraq

Death toll from Sunday's bombing in Hilla rises to at least 61, with authorities tightening security in Babil and neighbouring provinces
Iraqi emergency services clear debris at the site of Sunday's truck bomb in Hilla, south of Baghdad (AFP)

The death toll from a suicide truck bombing in Iraq claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group on Sunday grew overnight to 61 people, medical and security officials said on Monday.

Municipality vehicles were driving around Hilla, the city south of Baghdad where the attack occured, on Monday calling through loudspeakers for residents to donate blood.

A truck packed with explosives was detonated by a suicide bomber at the main checkpoint guarding the northern entrance to the city of Hilla, south of Baghdad, in the deadliest such attack in Iraq this year.

"The death toll following the suicide attack has risen to 61, including 23 members of the security forces," a doctor at Babil province health directorate told the AFP news agency.

Hilla, which lies around 80 kilometres (50 miles) south of Baghdad, is the capital of Babil province.

"There are four women and seven children among the dead," the doctor said, adding the number of wounded stood at 60, including eight women and five children.

A senior police officer from Babil Operations Command gave the same death toll but a slightly higher number of wounded.

Security was tight in and around the city and in neighbouring provinces including the capital Baghdad and Najaf amid fears over further IS attacks.

"There are serious security measures at all checkpoints around Baghdad following the suicide attack north of Hilla yesterday," a police colonel in the capital said.

"These terrorists often try to strike several times in quick succession."

A police officer at Babil Operations Command said 11 people were arrested in Jbala, a town 35 kilometres (22 miles) northeast of Hilla, as part of the probe into Sunday's attack.

It was not clear what the 11 were suspected of.

The number of suicide car bombs in the capital and in Shia-dominated southern regions of Iraq has decreased in recent months.

Yet observers have warned that, as it continues to lose territory on the battlefield, IS will likely revert to its old tactics and ramp up bomb attacks against civilians.

The explosive charges used in the most recent suicide attacks in Baghdad appeared to have been smaller than that used in the truck bombing outside Hilla on Sunday.

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