SHOTLIST Baghdad's Dora neighbourhood 1. Wide shot the area where the blast occurred with onlookers at the site/ destroyed bakery 2. Various shots of demolished bakery 3. Burnt out car among rubble, pan to demolished bakery 4. Various close-ups of rubble with blood on ground 5. Various of destruction 6. Various of women on roof of a house condemning the attack Musayyib, south of Baghdad 7. Ambulance driving nearby al-Musayyib hospital 8. People gathering outside mortuary 9. Covered dead body in morgue with hospital workers 10. Wide shot of men carrying body Baghdad 11. Sign reading ''al-Yarmouk Teaching Hospital'' 12. Men carrying coffin 13. Other men carrying another coffin to a car and shouting 14. Men placing coffin in back of car 15. Woman crying next to coffin in the car 16. Various of men carrying coffin and securing it on top of car 17. More coffins in back of trucks 18. Ambulance driving past mortuary of al-Yarmouk hospital STORYLINE: Iraq's government forged ahead with a plan aimed at ending sectarian attacks, even as the violence continued unabated on Tuesday with a deadly bombing in the capital that killed at least 11 and the discovery of dozens of fresh death squad victims. The explosion, from a bomb, planted under a car in the mixed Sunni-Shiite neighbourhood of Dora in south Baghdad, ripped through a line of people waiting in line outside a bakery, the deadliest of the day's attacks, which left a total 18 dead around the country. The bomb, planted under a civilian car in the primarily Sunni neighbourhood exploded just before 2 p.m. local time (1100 GMT), according to police. Those killed, and the four others injured, were waiting in line outside the building, which was completely demolished. Meanwhile two policemen were killed when a roadside bomb went off next to their vehicle in Jurf al-Sakhr, 70 kilometres south of Baghdad. The bodies of the victims were seen at the morgue of the nearby Musayyib hospital. The latest violence comes as authorities announced they had found the mutilated bodies of 60 men in Baghdad over a 24 hour period ending on Tuesday morning. The bullet-riddled bodies all had their hands and feet bound and showed signs of torture - hallmarks of death-squad killings, police said. The victims ranged in age from between 20 to 50-years-old, he said. Their bodies had been dumped in several neighbourhoods. Sectarian death squads have killed thousands in recent months and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is coming under increased pressure to find an end to the violence. You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d2cb78d196ec270d039aa816864bf6fe Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork