Islamic
State fighters attack Samarra ahead of army offensive
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[February 28, 2015]
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Islamic State
suicide bombers and fighters struck targets on Saturday in the northern
Iraqi city of Samarra, where security forces and their Shi'ite militia
allies have been gathering for an offensive against the radical Sunni
militants.
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Security sources and residents said the attack on Samarra was
launched at 5.30 am (0230 GMT) when two Islamic State suicide
bombers blew up their cars in the northern area of Sur Shnas.
At the same time a man drove a Humvee rigged with explosives into
the south of the city and detonated it, while Islamic State fighters
attacked security forces to the west with sniper fire, mortars and
rocket-propelled grenades.
Medical sources said Samarra hospital received the bodies of 14
Shi'ite militia fighters and policemen.
Residents reported seeing black smoke over parts of the city and
hearing powerful explosions. After heavy clashes in the morning, the
fighting appeared to have subsided by the afternoon.
Thousands of troops and fighters from Shi'ite militias known as
Hashid Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation) have gathered around Samarra
for a campaign to drive Islamic State out of nearby strongholds on
the Tigris River, including the city of Tikrit 50 km (30 miles) to
the north.
The army shelled northern and western districts of Tikrit on
Saturday, but did not send troops into the city, security sources
said. Army helicopters had also fired rockets at Islamic State
militants around Sur Shnas, they said.
In the town of Ishaaqi, about 20 km (10 miles) southeast of Samarra,
snipers shot dead two Hashid Shaabi men as they tried to set up a
sand barrier on the main highway linking Samarra to the capital
Baghdad.
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Further east in Diyala province, 11 people were killed in a twin car
bombing in the town of Balad Roz on Saturday. One of those killed
was a judge, security and medical sources said.
The army and Shi'ite militias have driven Islamic State out of
nearly all of Diyala province, which lies to the north-east of
Baghdad, on the border with Iran. But Saturday's blasts showed that
militants could still launch attacks there, just as they regularly
do in the Iraqi capital itself.
(Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Writing by Dominic Evans; Editing by
Pravin Char)
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