At least 74 dead, including Iranians, in Iraq attacks claimed by Daesh

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NASIRIYAH: Gunmen and suicide car bombers on Thursday killed at least 74 people, including Iranians, here near the southern Iraqi city, in an attack claimed by Daesh.

The attackers struck at midday, opening fire on a restaurant before getting into a car and blowing themselves up at a nearby security checkpoint, officials said.

Abdel Hussein al-Jabri — the deputy health chief for the province of Dhiqar — said at least 74 people had died, including seven Iranians, and another 93 people were wounded.

That was up from the previous toll of 52 dead and 91 wounded in what was already the deadliest Daesh attack in Iraq since pro-government forces drove the extremists out of second city Mosul in July.

Security sources said the attackers were disguised as members of the Hashed al-Shaabi — a paramilitary alliance that has fought alongside the army and police against Daesh in northern Iraq.

Rescue workers and members of the security forces placed bodies in ambulances and cleared away rubble and the carcasses of burnt-out cars from the site.

Burned bodies and vehicles including buses and trucks testified to the violence of the attack. Shelters built of corrugated metal were reduced to scraps of metal, twisted by heat.

The area targeted is on a highway used by pilgrims and visitors from neighbouring Iran to travel to the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala further north, although Dhiqar has previously been spared the worst of Iraq’s violence.

Daesh claimed responsibility for the attacks in a statement carried by its Amaq propaganda arm.

Daesh claim

It said several suicide bombers had staged the assault on a restaurant and a security checkpoint, killing “dozens”.

The extremist group regularly stages attacks in Iraq, where it has lost swathes of territory to US-backed pro-government forces.

Adding to the pressure on the militants, Iraqi forces recaptured the city of Tal Afar and the surrounding region from Daesh on August 31.

Thursday’s attacks come as Iraqi forces backed by tribal fighters closed in one of the last Daesh bastions in the country: Al-Qaim area on the border with war-ravaged Syria.

On Wednesday, an AFP correspondent in that area saw several artillery units positioning themselves around the towns of Rawa and Anna, 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the border with Syria.

The group’s only other stronghold is Hawija, in the Kirkuk province, some 300 kilometres north of Baghdad.

Daesh has suffered a string of defeats on the battlefields of both Iraq and Syria, leaving in tatters the cross-border “caliphate” it declared in 2014.

But despite these setbacks, the extremist group still has hundreds of fighters ready to carry out suicide attacks

In addition, any military offensive in Hawija is expected to be postponed due to a planned referendum on Kurdish independence on September 25.

Acting at the request of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, the Iraqi parliament on Thursday sacked the governor of Kirkuk over his decision for the northern province to also take part in the Kurdish referendum.