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Iraqi troops, militias repel Daesh attacks in Anbar province

By AP - Jun 06,2015 - Last updated at Jun 06,2015

BAGHDAD — Government forces and Shiite militiamen repelled two Daesh attacks in Anbar province on Saturday, officials said. In one attack, they used anti-tank missiles to stop four would-be suicide car bombers.

Police and military officials said Daesh fighters attacked the government-held town of Husseiba with heavy mortar fire early Saturday. They say the attackers retreated after an hours-long battle, leaving behind three destroyed vehicles and five dead fighters. At least 10 troops and militiamen were wounded in the clash.

Iraqi forces took Husseiba, near the militant-held provincial capital of Ramadi, from Daesh group last month.

The officials said that elsewhere in Anbar province, Iraqi troops using Russian anti-tank Kornet missiles destroyed four incoming suicide car bombs during a Daesh attack in the Tharthar area.

Iraqi forces, backed by Shiite militias, have been struggling to recapture areas lost to Daesh terror group in the country's west and north. Last month the militant group scored a stunning victory, overrunning Ramadi and capturing large amounts of ammunition and armoured vehicles from fleeing government troops.

In the aftermath of the Ramadi defeat, Iraqi officials have stepped up calls for more weapons and more direct support from the US and the international community.

During an international conference in Paris last week on the fight against Daesh terror group, a senior US official pledged to make it easier to get weapons, including US anti-tank rockets, to the Iraqi soldiers that need them.

Meanwhile, police said a bomb exploded at a commercial street in the Taji area, just north of Baghdad, killing two people and wounding five. Another bomb blast near several shops killed three people and wounded eight in the capital’s southern suburbs.

Medical officials confirmed the death toll. All officials in Baghdad and Anbar spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to journalists.

 

Iraq sees near-daily bombings frequently claimed by Daesh terror group, which seized large parts of the country during a stunning blitz last year.

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