Daesh kills 12 Sunni tribal fighters, police south of Mosul

Daesh kills 12 Sunni tribal fighters, police south of Mosul

November 20, 2016
An Iraqi air force helicopter fires missiles during a battle with Daesh militants at the airport of Tal Afar west of Mosul. — Reuters
An Iraqi air force helicopter fires missiles during a battle with Daesh militants at the airport of Tal Afar west of Mosul. — Reuters

[caption id="attachment_99854" align="alignleft" width="183"]An Iraqi air force helicopter fires missiles during a battle with Daesh militants at the airport of Tal Afar west of Mosul. — Reuters An Iraqi air force helicopter fires missiles during a battle with Daesh militants at the airport of Tal Afar west of Mosul. — Reuters
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TIKRIT, Iraq — Daesh killed seven Sunni tribal fighters who support the Iraqi government and five policemen on Saturday in a town south of Mosul, the insurgents’ last major city stronghold in Iraq, local security sources said.

The tribal fighters and police were gunned down at two fake checkpoints set up by the insurgents in Shirqat, a Sunni town between Mosul and Baghdad, they said.

Daesh has escalated attacks on forces and officials opposed to its rule as it fights off a military campaign to retake Mosul.

The hardline group claimed an attack on a Sunni wedding west of Baghdad that killed at least 12 people on Thursday. It staged attacks and bombings over the past weeks in the Sunni towns of Falluja and Rutba, also west of the capital.

Iraqi armed forces began their offensive on Mosul on Oct. 17, with air and ground support from a US-led coalition.

Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Sunni tribes and Iranian-backed Shiite paramilitary forces are also taking part. — Reuters


November 20, 2016
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