Gunmen in western Iraq kill 14 at Ramadan meal

Gunmen overran an Iraqi army checkpoint and then shot up a trailer packed with policemen breaking their Ramadan fast, killing a total of 14 troops in the country's restive western Anbar province, authorities said Thursday.

July 11, 2013

Sahoub Baghdadi





BAGHDAD — Gunmen overran an Iraqi army checkpoint and then shot up a trailer packed with policemen breaking their Ramadan fast, killing a total of 14 troops in the country's restive western Anbar province, authorities said Thursday.



The attack happened at sundown Wednesday as the troops were marking the end of the first day of fasting during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. It was the latest in a string of brazen strikes by militants that has killed more than 2,000 people since the start of April.



Gunmen launched their assault on an army checkpoint near the town of Barwana, which lies across the Euphrates River from the town of Haditha, about 220 kilometers (140 miles) northwest of Baghdad, according to Barwana's mayor, Meyasser Abdul-Mohsin.



The attackers then shot up a trailer used by special oil industry police force protecting a nearby pipeline as the men were sitting down to have the iftar meal that breaks the daytime Ramadan fast at sunset.



Abdul-Mohsin said three soldiers died at the checkpoint and 11 troops at the trailer.



A security official in nearby Haditha gave a similar account and confirmed the death toll. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.



There was no immediate claim of responsibility. — AP


July 11, 2013
HIGHLIGHTS
World
hour ago

US hails 'tremendous progress' at Ukraine peace talks

World
hour ago

Fifty students escape captors after mass kidnapping in Nigeria but more than 250 still held

World
2 hours ago

Chinese land, US radar and ties to Taiwan: The geopolitics rattling a tiny Pacific nation