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Tribal fighters, ISIS clash in Iraq’s Anbar; 32 killed

At least 32 people were killed on Friday in clashes -- which remain underway -- between ISIS terrorists and pro-government tribal fighters in Iraq’s western Anbar province, according to Iraqi security sources.

“Iraqi army troops on Friday morning clashed with ISIS terrorists near Anbar’s T1 area some 40 kilometers southeast of the city of Al-Qaim,” Army Major-General Qasim al-Muhammadi told.

According to al-Muhammadi, at least 25 terrorists were killed in the melee.

“A large number of terrorists cut and ran, fleeing towards the center of the Al-Qaim district,” he said.

Ahmed al-Dulaimi, an Anbar police captain, said Arab volunteer fighters had killed at least five ISIS militants in the same area late Thursday night.

“Two tribal fighters were killed in the fighting,” he said.

On Thursday, the Iraqi prime minister’s office announced that the army had launched fresh operations aimed at capturing Anbar’s ISIS-held border towns of Al-Qaim and Rawa.

After overrunning vast territories in Iraq and Syria in mid-2014, the terrorist group has recently suffered a string of defeats at the hands of the Iraqi army and a U.S.-led coalition.

In August, the group lost Tal Afar in Iraq’s northern Nineveh province. One month earlier, the city of Mosul -- once the capital of ISIS’s self-proclaimed "caliphate" -- fell to the army after a nine-month siege.

He pointed out that "ISIS gunmen were trying to block the progress of Iraqi forces towards the center of Al-Qaim."

Iraqi forces backed by Sunni tribal volunteers on Thursday recaptured the Jabbab district in Iraq’s western Anbar province from the ISIS terrorist group.

Earlier Thursday, the Iraqi prime minister’s office announced that the army had launched fresh operations aimed at capturing Anbar’s ISIS-held border towns of Al-Qaim and Rawa.

After overrunning vast territories in Iraq and Syria in mid-2014, ISIS has recently suffered a string of major defeats at the hands of the Iraqi army and a U.S.-led coalition.

In August, the terrorist group lost Tal Afar in Iraq’s northern Nineveh province. One month earlier, the city of Mosul -- once the capital of ISIS’s self-proclaimed "caliphate" -- fell to the army following a nine-month siege.

 


23:14 27.10.2017