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Iraq says forces recapture refinery town from Daesh militants

By AP - Oct 21,2015 - Last updated at Oct 21,2015

An Iraqi Shiite fighter from the Popular Mobilisation units, fighting alongside Iraqi forces, fires a heavy machinegun during a military operation against Daesh militants as they advance towards the centre of Baiji, some 250 kilometres north of Baghdad, on Sunday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Teamed up with paramilitary forces, Iraqi government troops on Tuesday drove Daesh militants out of a key oil refinery town north of Baghdad, a government spokesman said.

The Joint Military Command spokesman, Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, told The Associated Press that the troops imposed “full control” on the town, about 250 kilometres north of Baghdad. Rasool wouldn’t give more details on the fighting and casualities.

State-run TV aired footage of what it said was a residential area in Beiji. Soldiers could be seen waving Iraqi flags from rooftops as thick black smoke billowed into the air. The privately-owned Al Sumaria satellite channel showed troops firing into the air in celebration near demolished buildings. The troops were gathered around a famous bearded militia fighter who refers to himself as Abu Azrael, or the Father of the Angel of Death, saying his catchphrase “illa tahin” — meaning he will crush the Daesh militants like flour.

Daesh captured Beiji and then parts of a nearby oil refinery — Iraq’s largest — during its blitz across the country’s north in June 2014. The town and the refinery have been heavily contested since then. Iraq announced that troops had recaptured the entire refinery last week.

Iraqi forces launched a wide-scale operation last week as the second phase of an operation to drive Daesh militants out of Iraq’s central Salahuddin province. The government troops were backed by paramilitary forces, made up mainly of Shiite militia fighters.

 

According to US Maj. Mike Filanowski, an intelligence officer with the military’s joint task force in Baghdad, about a dozen Iraqis have been killed and 30 wounded in the fight over the last 72 hours. Filanowski and other US officials in Baghdad, said there are about 15,000 Iraqi forces in the Beiji area, including about 5,000 government soldiers and 10,000 members of the miltias known as the popular mobilisation forces.

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