You are here
Car bomb blast kills five in Iraq’s Tikrit — police, medics
By Thomson Reuters Foundation - Nov 18,2018 - Last updated at Nov 18,2018
Iraqi Shiite fighters stand at the site of a car bomb in 2015 in a suburb of Tikrit, Iraq (AFP file photo)
TIKRIT, Iraq — A car bomb blast killed at least five people and wounded 16 others in the Iraqi city of Tikrit on Sunday, police and medical sources said.
The blast set nearly a dozen vehicles on fire, the police sources said. Security forces have closed most of the city streets and deployed in case of any other incidents.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the explosion. Such attacks have been rare in Tikrit, about 160 kilometres north of Baghdad, since Daesh were defeated in Iraq in 2017.
Daesh militants have switched from controlling territory to insurgency tactics such as bombings and attacks on security forces since their military defeat.
Analysts and security sources warn these attacks are likely to increase in traditional Sunni militant strongholds in the north and west of the country, although security in Baghdad has improved.
Iraq's government said this week that about 2,000 Iraqi Daesh fighters based across the border in eastern Syria were seeking to come back to Iraq, and that security forces were preparing to prevent militant incursions.
Related Articles
A suicide car bomb killed 12 Shiite militiamen and Iraqi soldiers Monday in a town north of Baghdad, authorities said, sparking a battle between security forces and fighters with the extremist Islamic State group.
Iraqi forces and mainly Shiite militiamen battling to wrest full control of the city of Tikrit from Daesh militants paused their offensive for a second day on Saturday as they awaited reinforcements, a military source said.
Daesh militants have set fire to oil wells northeast of the city of Tikrit to obstruct an assault by Shiite militiamen and Iraqi soldiers trying to drive them from the Sunni Muslim city and surrounding towns, a witness said.