Iraqi soldiers killed in attack on army base
At least 12 soldiers killed and 12 others wounded in car bomb blast and shoot-out in country’s north.
At least 12 soldiers have been killed and 12 others were wounded in an attack on a military base in a restive area of northern Iraq.
Thursday’s attack took place at the base outside the city of Mosul, about 360 kilometres northwest of Baghdad, when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives-laden truck at the gates of the facility, an army officer and a police officer told the AP news agency.
A group of gunmen then opened fire from apparently commandeered military Humvees, sparking a shoot-out.
Over the past months, Mosul and the surrounding region have seen bold attacks by fighters, mainly from an al-Qaeda-splinter group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), against military and security forces.
Four people have been killed in latest artillery fire in the Iraqi town of Fallujah in Anbar Province, medical sources said.
The ISIL has seized control of parts of Anbar’s provincial capital, Ramadi, since December, as well as the centre of the nearby city of Fallujah.
Since then, Iraqi government security forces and allied Sunni tribal fighters have been struggling to dislodge ISIL members.
In Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, at least nine people were killed on Thursday after a car bomb exploded in the crowded commercial area of Karrada, police officials said.
No one has yet claimed responsibility for Thursday’s attacks.
Violence has escalated in Iraq over the past year, with 2013 seeing the highest death toll since the worst sectarian bloodletting in 2007, according to United Nations figures. More than 8,800 people were killed in violence last year.