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IRAQ WARS
Suicide bomber kills 26 in attack on anti-IS fighters in Iraq
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 24, 2014


Pope offers Christmas phone greetings to Iraqi refugees
Vatican City (AFP) Dec 24, 2014 - Pope Francis spoke by telephone to Iraqis living in a displaced people's camp near the main Kurdish city Arbil on Wednesday, assuring them they were in his Christmas thoughts.

The refugees were among those driven from their homes around Mosul last summer in an offensive by the jihadist Islamic State group (IS), and the pontiff used a satellite phone connection provided by Catholic channel TV 2000 to offer them his support.

"Dear brothers, I am close to you, very close to you in my heart," the pope was quoted as telling the refugees by Italian press agency AGI.

Many Christians have fled fighting to seek refuge in Arbil.

"The children and the elderly are in my heart," Francis also told the Iraqi refugees in the Ankawa camp, just hours before celebrating midnight mass in Saint Peter's basilica.

"Innocent children, children who have died, exploited children.... I am thinking, too, about grandparents, about the older people who have lived their lives, and who must now bear this cross."

This Christmas has been particularly difficult for the estimated 150,000 Christians displaced in Iraq, the Chaldean Patriarch Louis Sako told AFP in Baghdad.

"Particularly during this Christmas period, they needs reassuring signs. They must be told that they have not been abandoned or forgotten," he said.

On Monday, the pope addressed a long letter of support to Christians in the region, urging them to "persevere" despite the difficulties they face.

In it, he denounced IS as a "terrorist organisation of a size that was unimaginable before, committing all types of abuses... (and) striking some among you who have been brutally chased from your lands, where Christians have been present since apostolic times."

Francis lamented the suffering of women, children and the elderly who "must face the harshness of winter without a roof," and called for concrete support from the wealthier churches.

A suicide bomber attacked Sunni anti-jihadist fighters south of Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 26 people, while a senior counter-terrorism officer was shot dead in north Iraq, officials said.

The attack on the fighters, known as Sahwa, near a military base in the Madain area also wounded at least 56 people.

It was unclear how many of the victims were Sahwa fighters.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, but suicide bombings are a tactic almost exclusively employed by Sunni extremists in Iraq, including the Islamic State (IS) group, which Sahwa militia forces have fought against.

In the northern city of Kirkuk, a gunman killed Colonel Dhargham Khairallah, the head of Kirkuk province's anti-terrorism forces, a police colonel and a doctor said.

The officer was being driven in Kirkuk's Al-Shorjah neighbourhood in a taxi to keep a low profile, but the gunman sprayed him with bullets from another car, according to the officer.

IS spearheaded a sweeping militant offensive that has overrun much of Iraq's Sunni Arab heartland since June -- areas that Shiite-led government forces have sought local Sunni help to retake.

The Sahwa, or "Awakening" in Arabic, dates back to the height of the US-led war in Iraq, when Sunni tribesmen joined forces with the Americans to battle insurgents including IS's predecessor organisation, the Islamic State of Iraq.

The Sahwa were key to sharply but temporarily reducing violence, but when Iraq's government took over responsibility for their salaries they were sometimes paid late or not at all.

Now Sunni fighters, including the Sahwa and other armed tribesmen, again have an important role to play in the fight against IS.

The Iraqi government has distributed arms and ammunition to tribesmen, and Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi aims to establish a national guard made up of local fighters, though the necessary law has yet to pass parliament.

Iraqi security forces backed by US-led air strikes, Kurdish forces, Shiite militias and Sunni tribesmen have clawed back some ground from IS.

But major areas, especially north and west of Baghdad, remain outside government control.


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