Suspected mustard gas attack on Taza that left three-year-old girl dead ‘will not go unpunished,’ says PM Haider al-Abadi. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
BAGHDAD
- Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi vowed on Saturday to retaliate
against the Islamic State group after it launched a chemical attack on a
town near Kirkuk.
The suspected mustard gas attack on
Taza that left a three-year-old girl dead "will not go unpunished", the
premier said in a statement.
A large number of rockets were fired on Taza on Wednesday from the nearby village of Bashir, which is held by the jihadists.
Intelligence experts are still analysing samples but local officials believe mustard agent was used in the attack.
On
Saturday, an Iranian delegation visited Taza, which lies just south of
the city of Kirkuk and around 220 kilometres (135 miles) north of
Baghdad.
Abadi promised that medical support would be
provided to the town, where hundreds of people received care following
the chemical attack.
Hundreds of people attended the
funeral on Friday of Fatima Samir, the girl who died of wounds sustained
during the attack. Some of the mourners carried placards demanding
protection.
The Iraqi air force carried out a strike on
Bashir overnight and Abadi promised a ground operation to retake the
village from IS soon, pro-government militia commander Abu Ridha
al-Najjar said.
Bashir lies in an area that is
officially under federal administration but is controlled by Kurdish
forces that de facto expanded their autonomous region on the back of the
jihadists' 2014 offensive.
Tension has been high between Kurdish forces and Shiite militias in the area, impeding military cooperation against ISIS.
|
blog archive
Sunday, 13 March 2016
Iraq vows to retaliate after ISIS chemical attack
التسميات:
Middle-East-Online
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment