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Sunni group attacks al-Qaeda base | |
(1 day later) | |
A Sunni faction has killed 18 al-Qaeda militants in an attack on a compound near the Iraqi city of Samarra, police have said. | |
Another 16 al-Qaeda members were said to have been captured in the attack. | |
The Sunni Islamic Army of Iraq - once part of the insurgency against US-led forces - said its fighters attacked the compound east of the city. | |
The faction is one of several Sunni former insurgent groups that have now turned against al-Qaeda. | |
On Friday, five Sunni Arab tribal leaders had been killed in a suicide attack in Diyala province, north-east of Baghdad. | |
Safe havens | |
The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says the Islamic Army of Iraq is apparently planning to use those captured in an exchange of prisoners. | |
Samarra has been the scene of factional violence | |
A total of 15 fighters from the Islamic Army were also killed in the attack, police sources told Reuters news agency. | |
Analysts say that while the Islamic Army shares with the US military a common enemy in al-Qaeda, it does not support the coalition forces or their continued presence in Iraq. | |
No US or Iraqi security forces are thought to have been involved in the fighting. | |
Our correspondent says many of the Sunni tribes that used to provide safe havens for the militants are actively combating al-Qaeda. | |
Much of the violence in the troubled areas north of Baghdad reflect that struggle within the Sunni community, he says. | |
Austere Islam | |
On Friday, a suicide bomber detonated his explosives belt in the house of Sunni anti-al-Qaeda tribal leader Sheikh Faez al-Obeidi, killing him and four of his relatives. | |
Those killed were members of the Diyala Salvation Council. | |
Sheikh Abu Risha, a key US ally in Anbar, was killed in September | |
Ten others were wounded in the blast, which happened near the town of Khalis. | Ten others were wounded in the blast, which happened near the town of Khalis. |
Diyala province, home to a mixture of Sunnis and Shias, has become a key battleground in the struggle to drive al-Qaeda from Iraq. | Diyala province, home to a mixture of Sunnis and Shias, has become a key battleground in the struggle to drive al-Qaeda from Iraq. |
The battle has spread there from Anbar province, once a stronghold of the Sunni insurgency. | |
Many in the Sunni community say they dislike the austere form of Islam that al-Qaeda practises. | |
The US has provided al-Qaeda's opponents with training and arms. | |
But al-Qaeda has also carried out a number of attacks on Sunni figures opposed to it. | |
The leader of the Anbar Awakening, Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, was killed in a bomb attack near his home in Ramadi in September. | The leader of the Anbar Awakening, Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, was killed in a bomb attack near his home in Ramadi in September. |
A senior member of the Salahuddin Awakening Council, Sheikh Muawiya Jebara, was killed by a roadside bomb along with three of his bodyguards in October. | A senior member of the Salahuddin Awakening Council, Sheikh Muawiya Jebara, was killed by a roadside bomb along with three of his bodyguards in October. |
And a Sunni religious leader who encouraged his community to confront al-Qaeda in Iraq, Sheikh Yunis al-Tai, was also killed by a blast at his home in Diyala in August. |