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45 militants killed in clashes between Iraq army, ISIL in Salahuddin

Iraqi soldiers fire their weapons towards the positions of the ISIL Takfiri group in the district of Garma, in the Anbar province on April 26, 2015. (AFP photo)

Clashes between Iraq’s army and the ISIL Takfiri militants continue unabated in northern Salahuddin province with Iraqi air force killing at least 45 militants.

According to a Monday statement by Iraqi Interior Ministry, the militants were killed in an airstrike by the Iraqi army’s air force in the northern districts of Salahuddin.

The statement further said, “The airstrike resulted in killing 45 ISIL fighters in the district of al-Sharqat and the areas of Makfoul, al-Mallaha, and al-Ba’aji in the district of Baiji,” online newspaper Iraqi News reported.

The development comes as the Takfiri militants keep attacking the district of al-Dajil and the Baiji’s oil refinery.

“Baiji’s refinery and the district of al-Dajil are constantly under fierce ISIL attacks," Khaled al-Khazraji, the deputy president of the security committee in Salahuddin Provincial Council, told Iraqi News.

 He further noted that al-Jazirah is the area from which the ISIL attacks are launched.

“The forces are not blockaded inside the refinery, but they need reinforcements,” Khazraji added.

An Iraqi government forces vehicle drives on the western outskirts of Tikrit, on March 27, 2015, during a military operation to retake the city from the ISIL Takfiri militants. (AFP photo)

Salahuddin’s top commander, Abdel-Wahab al-Saadi, said on April 18 that the Iraqi army had managed to secure the areas surrounding the refinery and enter the site following heavy clashes with the ISIL terrorists.

Iraq’s biggest oil refinery, which once produced some 300,000 barrels of refined petroleum products per day, had been besieged for days by ISIL terrorists who had also managed to take over a small part of the site’s complex.

Baiji is located on a main road to the northern city of Mosul, which is under ISIL control and its liberation can choke off the militants’ supply lines.

Northern and western parts of Iraq have been in chaos since ISIL started its campaign of terror in early June 2014. The terrorists are in control of Mosul and they have swept through parts of the country. 

The Takfiri group is reportedly enforcing strict rules in the areas under its control.

New rules in Kirkuk

Reports said on Monday that the Takfiri group has forced civilians in the district of Hawija in the province of Kirkuk to dress as militants.  

“Daesh (Arabic acronym for ISIL) militias have recently asked residents of Hawija to dress up as the group’s militants and warned lawbreakers they will face punishment as harsh as the death penalty,” Sarhad Qadir, director of police in Kirkuk province, told the Kurdish newspaper Rudaw.

In the district of Zab in Kirkuk, the ISIL militants have punished a young man for wearing a t-shirt that had foreign phrases.

“This morning, ISIL flogged a young man from the Zab District 30 times for wearing a T-shirt containing foreign words in the center of the district (60 km southwest of Kirkuk),” a local source said, adding, the Takfiri group has “required men, young people and even children to wear Afghan uniforms,” ​​and threatened to “punish the violators of these instructions.”

The ISIL Takfiri terrorist group, with members from several Western countries, controls swathes of land in Iraq and Syria, and has been carrying out horrific acts of violence such as public decapitations and crucifixions against all communities such as Shias, Sunnis, Kurds and Christians.

IA/NN/AS


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