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Iraq
Heavy clashes, suicide bombings kill 36 in north Iraq
2014-06-07
Heavy fighting between security forces and militants and twin suicide bombings killed 36 people in north Iraq on Friday, as deadly violence shook other parts of the country, AFP reported. Clashes between security forces and militants broke out in several areas of Nineveh provincial capital Mosul on Friday morning and, according to Governor Atheel al-Nujaifi, continued into the night.

In west Mosul, four police, three soldiers and 16 militants were killed in fighting, while a mortar round killed a civilian, police and a medical official said. Three more soldiers were killed clashes with militants in east Mosul, while security forces shot dead five would-be suicide bombers in the Hamam al-Alil area, south of the city.

And two suicide bombers blew up vehicles in Al-Muwaffaqiyah, a village east of Mosul that is populated by members of the minority Shabak community, killing four people and wounding 45, police and medical officials said.

In Baquba, north of Baghdad, shelling and a car bomb killed a total of four people and wounded six, while shelling in the Saba al-Bur area, also north of the capital, killed at least five people and wounded at least 14.

The violence came a day after militants launched a major attack on the city of Samarra, north of Baghdad, occupying multiple neighborhoods. Soldiers, police and tribal fighters backed by helicopters eventually regained control, a senior army officer said, but only after heavy fighting that officials said killed 12 police and dozens of militants.

The areas occupied by militants were however located in eastern Samarra, and they would have had to advance significantly farther to threaten the shrine, which was bombed by extremists in 2006, setting off a bloody sectarian conflict. The allegation itself that the revered shrine was the target has the potential to increase the already-significant sectarian tensions plaguing the country.
Posted by:Steve White

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