Off the wire
UNHCR concerned over xenophobia attacks in S. Africa  • Agricultural land prices, rents in Bulgaria rise in 2014  • Results of Chinese national swimming championships  • Chinese VP meets Liberal Party of Australia delegation  • Thangka art exhibition inaugurated in Malta  • Slovak PM Fico urges opposition parliamentary vice chair to step down  • UN to support Burundi's Truth, Reconciliation Commission  • Africa Focus: One year after, 219 Nigerian schoolgirls still missing from Boko Haram kidnapping  • Norwegian Air cancels almost all flights to Finland  • China forms wetlands protection association  
You are here:   Home

10 killed in clashes with IS group in Iraq's Baiji oil refinery

Xinhua, April 14, 2015 Adjust font size:

The commander of a federal police force tasked with protecting Iraq's largest oil refinery was killed Tuesday in fierce battles with the Islamic State (IS) militants who managed to seize part of the refinery, provincial security sources said.

The IS militants carried out an attack on the refinery near the town of Baiji in Salahudin province at dawn and made some progress inside the huge oil facility after heavy clashes with the security forces, killing Major Gen. Dhaif Khalaf and nine of his bodyguards, the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

The extremist militants set fire to some installations of the refinery, sending columns of black smoke above the area, and apparently prevented the air support to the troops, the source said.

Despite their partial advance inside the refinery, the IS militants failed to take control of large parts of the oil facility by fierce resistance of the security forces, the source added.

Abdul-Wahab al-Saedi, commander of Salahudin operations, told Iraqi media that reinforcement forces arrived to Baiji, some 200 km north of Baghdad, and are moving in three directions toward the refinery in order to support the troops who are fighting inside the refinery.

The advance of IS is part of a series of attacks that targeted the oil refinery since Saturday, but the security forces reportedly repelled the attacks with the assistance of the international coalition and Iraqi aircraft.

Separately, four policemen were killed while they were trying to defuse a booby-trapped house in al-Qadsiyah district in northern part of the provincial capital city of Tikrit, some 170 km north of Baghdad, a provincial security source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, four government-backed Sunni tribesmen were killed and two others wounded in a clash with IS militants in the village of al-Mazraa in south of Baiji, the source said.

Battles in the Sunni dominated province of Salahudin came about two weeks after the Iraqi security forces retook control of Tikrit, when some 30,000 security members backed by allied Shiite and Sunni militias and covered by Iraqi and U.S.-led coalition aircraft launched Iraq's biggest offensive against the IS militant group. Endit