(Reuters) - Iraqi
security forces and militias fought their way into Saddam Hussein's
home city of Tikrit on Wednesday, advancing from the north and south in
their biggest counter-offensive so far against Islamic State militants. In a possible response to the
fighting north of Baghdad, militants in the Islamic State stronghold of
Anbar west of the capital launched 13 suicide car bomb attacks on army
and security positions in the provincial capital of Ramadi. Army
and militia fighters captured part of Tikrit's northern Qadisiya
district, the provincial governor said, while in the south of the Tigris
river city a security officer said another force made a rapid push
toward the center. "The forces
entered Tikrit general hospital," an official at the main military
operation command center said. "There is heavy fighting going on near
the presidential palaces, next to the hospital complex." Islamic
State fighters who stormed into Tikrit last June during a lightning
offensive through northern and central Iraq have used the complex of
palaces built in Tikrit under Saddam, the executed former president, as
their headquarters. More than
20,000 troops and Iranian-backed Shi'ite Muslim militias known as Hashid
Shaabi, supported by local Sunni Muslim tribes, launched the offensive
for Tikrit 10 days ago, advancing from the east and along the east bank
of the Tigris. On Tuesday they took the town of al-Alam on the northern edge of Tikrit, paving the way for an attack on the city itself. "The
governor of Salahuddin announces the purging of half of Qadisiya
district, the largest of Tikrit's neighborhoods," a statement from
governor Raed al-Jubouri's office said. The
army and militia fighters raised the national flag above a military
hospital in the section of Qadisiya they had retaken from the militants,
security officials said. After
pausing while helicopters attacked Islamic State snipers and positions,
the ground forces were progressing steadily, taking "one street every 30
minutes", the security official said. He said there was fierce fighting
around Tikrit police headquarters just south of Qadisiya. To
the northwest, troops and Hashid Shaabi fighters were clashing with
Islamic State militants in the city's industrial zone, he added. RAMADI ATTACKS If
Iraq's Shi'ite-led government retook Tikrit it would be the first city
clawed back from the Sunni insurgents and would give it momentum in the
next, pivotal stage of the campaign - recapturing Mosul, the largest
city in the north. Mosul is also
the biggest city held by the ultra-radical Islamic State, who now rule a
self-declared cross-border caliphate in Sunni regions of Syria and
Iraq. Over the past few months
Islamic State has gradually lost ground in Iraq to the army, Shi'ite
militias and Kurdish peshmerga forces, backed by air strikes carried out
by a U.S.-led coalition of mainly Western and allied Arab states. The
United States says Baghdad did not seek aerial backup from the
coalition in the Tikrit campaign. Instead, support on the ground has
come from neighboring Iran, Washington's longtime rival in the region.
Tehran has sent an elite Revolutionary Guard commander to oversee part
of the battle. In Ramadi, about 90
km (55 miles) west of Baghdad, suicide car bombers in 13 vehicles
attacked Iraqi army positions. The death toll from the attacks was not
clear and officials rarely give details of casualties among security
forces in Anbar. A medical source said five people were killed in the attacks, but the real figure could be significantly higher. One of the car bombs exploded near a bridge in the west of the city and damaged part of the bridge, a police source said. An
Islamic State suicide bomber also struck a position of the Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) in the northern town of Sinjar. After the bombing
some 70 militants launched an attack but were driven back by coalition
airstrikes, according to a senior Kurdish security official in the area. In Baghdad, six people were killed when a car bomb exploded in a busy street in the mainly Shi'ite district of Hurriya.
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.