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IRAQ WARS
Militants seize control of Iraq prison
by Staff Writers
Tikrit, Iraq (AFP) Sept 27, 2012

Iraq forces arrest militant as Sept. deaths top 200
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 27, 2012 - Iraqi forces have arrested an insurgent allegedly involved in more than 30 attacks, a security spokesman said Thursday, as violence brought the number of people killed in Iraq this month to 201.

The insurgent, who was not identified by name, "admitted to carrying out more than 30 assassination and bombing operations," including setting off a car bomb in the Hurriyah area of the capital earlier this month, Baghdad Operations Command spokesman Colonel Dhia al-Wakil said in a statement.

A car bomb in Hurriyah killed three people and wounded 14 others on September 9, one of more than 30 attacks across Iraq that day.

Wakil said that further details will be released after the investigation is completed.

On Thursday, gunmen killed an employee of Al-Kindi hospital in the Shaab area of north Baghdad, while a bomb in Mahmudiyah, south of the capital, killed one person and wounded at least one more, interior ministry and medical sources said.

And a magnetic "sticky bomb" killed one person north of Baquba, the capital of Diyala province, a police lieutenant colonel and a doctor from Baquba General Hospital said.

With the latest violence, at least 201 people have been killed and 693 wounded in attacks so far this month, according to an AFP tally based on security and medical sources.


Militants seized control of a prison in the Iraqi city of Tikrit on Thursday night after fierce clashes with guards that left at least two dead and allowed some prisoners to escape.

The assault comes after Al-Qaeda's Iraqi front group announced a campaign to regain territory and said it aimed to help its jailed members escape.

"The attackers are controlling all the (entrances and exits) and the observation towers, and ... security forces are surrounding the prison," Salaheddin provincial deputy governor Ahmed Abdul Jabbar Abdul Karim told AFP by telephone.

An interior ministry official also said the gunmen took control of all the exits and entrances to the prison in Tikrit, 160 kilometres (100 miles) north of Baghdad, and that two police were killed in the fighting.

A police officer put the toll from attack at four police and two gunmen killed.

Police Lieutenant General Rashid Fleih, the head of the Samarra Operations Command, said on Sharqiya television that prisoners had escaped from the Tikrit prison, and that 13 were captured, while a small number were still at large.

Accounts differed as to whether the unrest began with an outside assault, a riot inside the prison, or possibly both.

"A suicide bomber targeted the gate of the prison with a car bomb and gunmen then assaulted the prison, after which they killed the guards," a police lieutenant colonel said.

A police colonel said there were "clashes between police and gunmen inside the prison, and a curfew has been announced in Tikrit."

Another colonel said riots broke out inside the prison, after which police sought to bring them under control.

"The prisoners killed one policeman and wounded (prison director) Brigadier General Laith al-Sagmani," the colonel said, adding that "the gunmen took control of the prison, and clashes are continuing."

A traffic police lieutenant colonel who was near the scene of the attack said militants blew up a portion of the prison fence, and that between 30 and 40 prisoners were able to escape.

And other witnesses said prisoners seized the guards' weapons, and that more than 100 of them escaped and fought security forces in the surrounding area.

The tactics employed in the assault were reminiscent of those used in attacks in July and August.

Gunmen attempted to use bombs to breach a prison gate in Taji, north of Baghdad, on August 1, after using similar tactics on the anti-terrorism directorate in the capital the day before in an attack the interior ministry said was an attempt to free inmates.

Al-Qaeda's front group the Islamic State of Iraq said in July that it was launching a "new military campaign aimed at recovering territory."

An earlier message posted on jihadist forums said the ISI would begin targeting judges and prosecutors, and try to help its prisoners break out of jails.

While insurgents opposed to the Baghdad government are regarded as weaker than in past years, they have shown they can strike at even the most highly secure sites in Iraq.

In addition to the prison in Taji and the anti-terrorism directorate, targets in recent months have included a police station, a military base and an entrance to Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where the government is headquartered.

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Iraq PM declines invitation to visit Turkey
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 27, 2012 - Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has declined an invitation from his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan to visit Ankara, the Iraqi premier's spokesman said on Thursday.

Maliki expressed regret that he could not accept the invitation, as "his schedule is crowded and he is busy," Ali Mussawi told AFP.

Ties between Iraq and Turkey have been marred by a flurry of disputes this year, most recently Ankara's refusal to extradite Iraqi Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, who has been sentenced to death in absentia by an Iraqi court.

In August, Maliki accused Turkey of treating the autonomous Kurdistan region of north Iraq, with which it has close economic ties, as an "independent state."

Earlier that month, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu visited the disputed northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk without informing Baghdad, infuriating Iraq and taking relations to a new low.

In July, Iraq warned Ankara against "any violations" of its territory and airspace, and instructed the foreign ministry to register a complaint at the UN Security Council, after Turkish jets bombed Kurdish rebels in Kurdistan.

A few days earlier, Iraq called on Turkey to stop accepting "illegal" transfers of crude oil from Kurdistan, which an official from the region said had begun earlier in the month.

And in April, Maliki said Turkey was becoming a "hostile state" in the region, accusing Erdogan of interfering in internal Iraqi affairs.

His remarks came after the Turkish premier accused Maliki's Shiite-led government of stoking sectarian tensions.



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IRAQ WARS
Bombings and shootings kill eight in Iraq
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 26, 2012
Bombings and shootings mainly targeting Iraqi security forces killed eight people on Wednesday, among them a senior police officer, security and medical officials said. The violence comes a day after a wave of attacks against members of the security forces left nine police and soldiers dead and 11 wounded. In the deadliest attack, two roadside bombs exploded in an area about 40 kilometre ... read more


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