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Iraqi troops, militia enter strategic town near Tikrit

by Reuters
Tuesday, 10 March 2015 09:30 GMT

A member of Iraqi security forces gestures in the town of al-Alam March 9, 2015. Just north of Tikrit, home city of executed Sunni former president Saddam Hussein, Iraqi security forces and Shi'ite militia fighters began an offensive against Islamic State to regain control over the town of al-Alam. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani

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Al-Alam is the last Islamic State stronghold that needs to be cleared before government forces and militiamen can enter Tikrit

BAGHDAD, March 10 (Reuters) - Iraqi security forces and Shi'ite militia took the centre of a town on the northern edge of Tikrit from Islamic State on Tuesday as they closed in on Saddam Hussein's home city.

Al-Alam is the last Islamic State stronghold that needs to be cleared before government forces and militiamen can enter the city of Tikrit itself, which has been under militant control since last summer.

Military commanders said Islamic State militants were still holding out in houses in the northern section of al-Alam, but the army and mainly Shi'ite militia had retaken the town centre and were preparing for street fighting to seize the rest.

"Snipers and booby traps are slowing our advance to completely control all parts of the town," said army captain Wisam Ibrahim, speaking from al-Alam.

"We're waiting for the army helicopters to secure the way for a smooth advance for the troops," he said.

The battle for Tikrit its aftermath will inform any plans to move further north and recapture Mosul, the largest city under Islamic State rule.

The campaign to retake Tikrit, which began one week ago, is the biggest since Islamic State swept across the north last year, and the government hopes it will reverse the militants' momentum.

Islamic State has sent reinforcements to Tikrit from other parts of its self-proclaimed caliphate further north, where it came under attack on Monday from Kurdish forces around the oil-rich-city of Kirkuk.

(Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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