(Reuters) -
Security forces entered Iraq's largest refinery for the first time on
Tuesday after months of battling Islamic State militants who had
surrounded it, a police colonel said. Police sources said
security forces were clearing out mines from the refinery complex and
had moved to an area just to the northwest where they faced some
resistance from Islamic State militants. The insurgents still have a
presence there. Complete
recovery of the Baiji facility could provide critical momentum for
government forces charged with restoring stability in a country facing
its worst security crisis since dictator Saddam Hussein was toppled in
2003. "The first Iraqi
force, the anti-terrorism force called Mosul Battalion, entered Baiji
refinery for the first time in five months," police colonel Saleh Jaber
of the Baiji refinery protection force told Reuters. State
television flashed news of the advance and broadcast footage it
said was of Iraqi security forces entering the refinery's gate. "In
this area, terrorists were stationed to the left and right. If God is
willing, Baiji will be the main key to liberating each span of Iraq,"
the commander of provincial security operations, Abdel Wahab al-Sa'adi,
told the broadcaster. U.S-led
air strikes have prevented the Islamist group, which swept through
northern Iraq in June almost unopposed by the Iraqi army, from making
significant further territorial gains for its self-proclaimed caliphate.
Islamic State seized the city of Baiji and surrounded the sprawling refinery during that first advance in June. Islamic
State has stolen oil and petroleum products from areas it controls in
an effort to create a self-sustaining Islamic empire, oil officials say. Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi sacked 26 military commanders this
month for corruption in an apparent bid to show the government is
serious about improving the performance of the army to counter Islamic
State. The Baiji
refinery was producing around 175,000 barrels per day before it was
closed, a senior Iraqi official said in June. Iraq’s domestic daily
consumption is estimated at 600,000-700,000 bpd.
Iraqi security forces enter Baiji refinery: state TV
Reuters
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