Baghdad, Iraqi ground forces secured the perimeter around the country’s biggest oil refinery today and entered the vast complex amid heavy clashes with Islamic State militants, said a senior Iraqi military official.
Abdel-Wahab al-Saadi, the top military commander in Iraq’s Salahuddin province, said ground forces entered the Beiji oil refinery today, days after a number of IS militants carried out a large-scale attack and briefly took over a small part of the complex.
“It is another victory achieved by Iraqi security forces that are growing confident in the war against the terrorists,” al-Saadi told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
The refinery has remained under government control, but the militants had been surrounding the entire complex preventing access by Iraqi forces.
A day earlier, Iraqi soldiers, backed by US-led coalition airstrikes and Shiite and Sunni militias dubbed the Popular Mobilisation Forces, gained control of the towns of al-Malha and al-Mazraah, located 3 kilometres south of the Beiji refinery. Iraqi forces recaptured Tikrit, capital of Salahuddin, on April 1 and have been gradually pushing their offensive north to secure the rest of the province.