(Reuters) -
Islamic State fighters attacked a riverside town north of Baghdad on
Monday with gunboats and a car bomb, killing 17 people and wounding 54, a
security source said. The source said the attack on
Dhuluiya, around 70 km (45 miles) from the capital, was carried out
before dawn and continued for two hours before the militants were pushed
back. Among the dead in the
attack, the largest of its kind in the area, were civilians and Iraqi
forces. Most of the casualties were caused by the car bomb, which struck
a market, the source said. Dhuluiya
is part of a belt of Sunni Muslim towns north of Baghdad where the
hardline Sunni Muslim Islamic State has managed to wrestle some control,
often aligning with local militia who distrust the Shi'ite-led
government. Islamic State fighters took advantage of the chaos in Iraq to muscle in and become the dominant force among Sunnis. US President Barack Obama ordered air strikes in northern Iraq
last month as Kurdish-controlled territory fell to the Islamic State
and the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan looked in danger. These have since
spread to central Iraq. A tribal
source near the Kurdish city of Kirkuk said Iraqi Air Force jets bombed
two areas near the town of Hawijah, killing 14 civilians in Islamic
State-controlled territory.
Islamic State launch gunboat attack on river-side town
Reuters
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