Dozens
of prisoners were on the loose today after militants attacked a prison in the
Iraqi city of Tikrit, leaving at least 13 policemen dead, officials said.
The
violence at the prison comes after Al-Qaeda's Iraqi front group announced a
campaign to regain territory and said it aimed to help its jailed members
escape.
Salaheddin
provincial deputy governor Ahmed Abdul Jabbar told AFP by telephone that the
Tikrit prison had been retaken from militants who seized it on Thursday night,
but that 83 prisoners escaped.
A
hospital official in Tikrit, the ancestral home of now-executed Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein, said 13 police were killed and 34 wounded in the violence.
A source
in the Salaheddin police command said, meanwhile, that 15 policemen and seven
prisoners were killed, and put the number of escaped prisoners at about 100.
"We
took control of the prison, and the gunmen handed over their weapons," the
official said.
Accounts
differed on the specifics of the unrest, but it appears militants attacked from
outside the prison, while inmates may have seized weapons from guards inside.
A police
lieutenant colonel said Thursday that a suicide bomber detonated a car bomb at
the gate of the prison, after which it was assaulted by gunmen.
And a
traffic police lieutenant colonel who was near the scene of the attack said
militants blew up part of the prison fence, and between 30 and 40 inmates were
able to escape.
A police
colonel said riots broke out in the prison, while witnesses said inmates seized
the guards' weapons, and that more than 100 of them escaped and fought security
forces in the surrounding area.
The
tactics reportedly employed in the assault were reminiscent of those used in
attacks in July and August.
Gunmen
attempted to use bombs to breach a prison gate in Taji, north of Baghdad, on
August 1, after using similar tactics on the anti-terrorism directorate in the
capital the day before in an attack the interior ministry said was an attempt
to free inmates.
Al-Qaeda
front group the Islamic State of Iraq said in July that it was launching a
"new military campaign aimed at recovering territory." An earlier
message posted on jihadist forums said the ISI would begin targeting judges and
prosecutors, and try to help its prisoners break out of jails.
While
insurgents opposed to the Baghdad government are regarded as weaker than in
past years, they have shown they can strike at even the most highly secure
sites in Iraq.
In
addition to the prisons in Tikrit and Taji and the anti-terrorism directorate,
targets in recent months have included a police station, a military base and an
entrance to Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where the government is
headquartered.
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