IS surprise attack west of Baghdad kills 11: security, medical sources

Source: AFP Published: 2020/11/9 16:43:40

Islamic State (IS) militants attend a surrender ceremony in Jalalabad city, capital of Nangarhar province, Afghanistan, Nov. 17, 2019. More than 600 Islamic State (IS) fighters and their families including women and children have surrendered to security forces in Achin district of eastern Afghanistan's Nangarhar province over the past two weeks amid increasing military operations, an army commander in the restive district General Mohammad Karim Niazi said. (Photo by Saifurahman Safi/Xinhua)

An Islamic State (IS) group attack on a lookout point west of Baghdad manned by a state-sponsored tribal force left 11 people dead late Sunday, security sources and medics told AFP.

The jihadists threw grenades and fired on the tribal Hashed forces stationed at Al-Radwaniyah, on the southern outskirts of the Iraqi capital. 

"IS attacked the monitoring tower, killing five members of the tribal Hashed and six local people who had come to help repel the attack," a security source said.

A medic confirmed the toll to AFP, and said eight wounded were transferred to a hospital in central Baghdad.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility from IS.

IS swept across a third of Iraq in 2014, seizing major cities across the north and west and reaching the suburbs of the capital Baghdad. After a fierce three-year fight backed by the US-led coalition, Iraq declared IS defeated in late 2017.

The coalition has significantly drawn down its troops in 2020, consolidating them to three main bases in Baghdad, Ain al-Asad in the west and Arbil in the north. 

But IS' sleeper cells have continued to wage hit-and-run attacks on security forces and state infrastructure, particularly in desert areas where troops are stretched thin.

Attacks with such high tolls and so close to the capital have been rare, however.

AFP

Posted in: MID-EAST

blog comments powered by Disqus