Fifty inmates and
12 police died in a prison escape organized by Islamic State, Iraqi
officials said on Saturday, while supporters of the group acknowledged
it staged the breakout but gave different details. After
a riot erupted, dozens of prisoners escaped from the Al-Khalis facility
about 80 km (50 miles) northeast of Baghdad, security and police
officials said. Militants
of Islamic State, the group sometimes known as ISIS which has seized
large areas of Iraq and Syria, broke in with the help of explosives to
free 30 inmates and get into the jail's weapons stores, said Amaq News
Agency, which supports the group. The agency said Shi'ite militiamen then stormed the prison and killed about 60 militants in clashes. "ISIS
was responsible for the killings and the release of ISIS prisoners,"
said Oudi Al-Khadran, mayor of the town where the prison, which holds
hundreds of people convicted of terrorism, is located. That account was confirmed by Colonel Ahmed al-Timimi of the Diyala province security operations center. It
was not clear if any high-profile prisoners were held at Al-Khalis,
said the head of Diyala's security committee, Seyyid Sadiq al-Husseini. "The
inmates started fighting among themselves, which drew the attention of
the police guards who went to break up the fight," said a police source,
asking not to be named. "Then the
prisoners attacked them, stripped them of their weapons and started a
riot while also managing to capture the armory of the prison." Authorities declared a curfew in Al-Khalis and raided houses in search of escaped convicts, said another police source. The Iraqi
government, which is backed by U.S. air strikes in its campaign against
Islamic State, is also trying to contain widespread sectarian violence. A car bomb in Baghdad on Saturday killed seven civilians and wounded 14 others, police and medical sources said.
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