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Militants attack Iraq’s Samarra, sparking heavy fighting

By AFP - Jun 05,2014 - Last updated at Jun 05,2014

SAMARRA, Iraq — Militants launched a major attack on the Iraqi city of Samarra Thursday and occupied several neighbourhoods, sparking house-to-house fighting and helicopter strikes in which dozens of people were reportedly killed.

Security forces ultimately regained control of the militant-held areas, a senior army officer said, but the attack was yet another example of the long reach of militants in Iraq.

On Thursday morning, militants travelling in dozens of vehicles, some mounted with anti-aircraft guns, attacked a major checkpoint on the southeast side of Samarra, killing the security forces guarding it and burning their vehicles, witnesses said.

They then took control of several areas of the city, located north of Baghdad, according to witnesses, who reported seeing the bodies of both security forces and gunmen in the streets.

The assault sparked heavy fighting, and a police officer said reinforcements including members of Iraq’s elite counterterrorism forces were dispatched to Samarra to combat the militants.

At one point, an AFP journalist saw helicopters firing into the city.

Staff Lieutenant General Sabah Al Fatlawi said on Thursday night that security forces and tribal fighters were able to regain control of the city.

“We have completely dismissed the armed groups from Samarra and we are now pursuing them outside the city,” Fatlawi said.

“We were able to kill 80 [militants] in strikes and attacks and clashes, from house to house and one street to another,” he said.

A police colonel and a doctor said that 12 police were killed in the violence.

Militants also attacked the home of Science and Technology Minister Abdulkarim Al Samarraie in the Khadra area of Samarra, killing three of his guards, police and a doctor said.

In other violence on Thursday, bombings in the Baghdad area killed three people, while four more were shot dead with silenced weapons in the northern city of Mosul, security and medical officials said.

Security forces killed 40 militants south of Mosul and one inside the city, officials said.

The assault in Samarra came as a standoff between anti-government fighters and security forces in Iraq’s Anbar province, west of Baghdad, entered its sixth month.

The city of Fallujah, just a short drive from Baghdad, and some parts of provincial capital Ramadi, farther west, have been outside government control since early January.

 

Medical supplies to Fallujah 

 

On Thursday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said it delivered medical supplies to Fallujah, the first time it was able to enter the city since January.

“The situation is very worrying,” said Patricia Guiote, head of the Red Cross sub-delegation in Baghdad and leader of the five-member team that delivered the supplies to Fallujah.

“People are enduring a severe shortage of food, water and healthcare. Services at the hospital, which is the only facility still able to provide treatment for the injured and the sick, have been seriously affected by the fighting.”

The ICRC said the team delivering the supplies found “immense needs and a situation that is extremely dire”.

“People in the city are living through a terrible ordeal.”

Upwards of 350 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in months of conflict in Fallujah, according to Dr Ahmed Shami at the city’s hospital.

Violence in Iraq is running at its highest levels since 2006-2007, the height of the country’s Sunni-Shiite sectarian conflict that was sparked by the bombing of a Shiite shrine in Samarra and left tens of thousands dead.

More than 900 people were killed last month, according to figures separately compiled by the United Nations and the government.

And over 4,000 have been killed so far this year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.

Officials blame external factors for the rise in bloodshed, particularly the civil war in neighbouring Syria, and insist wide-ranging operations against militants are having an impact.

But the violence continues unabated, with analysts and diplomats saying the Shiite-led government needs to do more to reach out to the disaffected Sunni Arab minority to reduce support for militancy.

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