Iraq crisis: Baiji oil refinery contested

Screengrab from a video purportedly showing a large plume of smoke rising from the Baiji oil refinery (18 June 2014)

Iraqi government forces are battling Sunni Muslim militants for control of the country’s biggest oil refinery.

Officials insisted security forces were “in full control” of the Baiji refinery, about 200km (130 miles) north of the capital Baghdad.

However, trapped workers said militants were still inside the facility and that there continued to be sporadic clashes.

The fighting comes as US President Barack Obama considers a request for air strikes against the militants.

A spokesman for the party of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki told the BBC the country’s leaders had felt “abandoned” by the international community as several northern cities and towns were seized by attacks by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) and its Sunni Arab allies.

 

ISIS-led militants launched an assault on the Baiji refinery early on Wednesday.

Map showing ISIS activity

On Thursday, the Iraqi military said some 100 assailants had been killed as troops and helicopter gunships repelled repeated attacks that continued overnight.

“Baiji oil refinery is in full control of the Iraqi security forces, and that all the terrorist attempts to target it were thwarted,” Lt Gen Qasim Atta told a news conference.

But workers trapped inside said the militants had breached the perimeter and set fire to several storage tanks. Some said they had taken control of most of the facility. Video footage showed smoke billowing from the refinery and the black flag used by ISIS flying from a building.

“Iraqi forces are still inside the refinery, and they control it,” Dhahi al-Juburi, one of the workers, told the AFP news agency, adding that “insurgents are still in several places in the refinery, and even in some towers”.

 

Another witness told the Associated Press that militants also manned checkpoints around the refinery.

Nearly all the 15,000 workers at the refinery and 100 foreign experts left on Tuesday when the plant was shut down in anticipation of the attack.

On Thursday morning, about 250 to 300 workers were evacuated under an agreement brokered by local tribal leaders, one of the workers told the Reuters news agency.

The battle over Baiji, which supplies much of the country’s domestic fuel, has sparked fears that Iraqis will soon experience long queues at petrol pumps and electricity shortages.

ISIS militants inside an Iraqi army Humvee armoured vehicle in Baiji (17 June 2014)
ISIS-led militants overran the town of Baiji last week, seizing abandoned military vehicles
Iraqi motorists queue for fuel in Kirkuk (18 June 2014)
The closure of Baiji has already had an impact on petrol supplies in northern Iraq
Iraqi Shia Turkmen arrive at the northern town of Shangal after fleeing the city of Tal Afar (17 June 2014)The UN Children’s Fund said the situation facing the 400,000 displaced people in the north was “dire”

Meanwhile, police told the BBC that ISIS-led militants had killed 13 police officers and Kurdish peshmerga militiamen while capturing the village of Bayshir, south of the strategically important northern city of Kirkuk, over the past two days.

On Wednesday there were fierce clashes in Baquba, about 60km (37 miles) north of Baghdad, as jihadists again tried to enter the city centre and seize its prison.

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Iraq’s sectarian split

Tribesmen shout slogans while carrying weapons during a rally in the Shia holy city of Karbala (28 June 2014)
Members of Iraq’s Shia majority community have volunteered to fight alongside the security forces
  • Sunnis and Shia share fundamental beliefs, but differ in doctrine, ritual, law, theology and religious organisation
  • The origins of the split lie in a dispute over who should have succeeded the Prophet Muhammad as leader of the Muslim community
  • Sunnis are the majority sect in the Muslim world, but Shia, most of them ethnic Arabs, form between 60% and 65% of Iraq’s population; Sunnis make up 32-37%, split between Arabs and Kurds
  • Sunni Arabs dominated Iraq under Saddam Hussein and their persecution of the Shia stoked sectarian tensions; the US-led invasion in 2003 gave the Shia an opportunity to seek redress
  • Nouri Maliki has been accused of denying Sunni Arabs meaningful representation and pursuing security policies that target them

 

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Shia militiamen have been sent to assist in the defence of the capital of Diyala province, which has effectively become a front line, and the nearby city of Samarra, site of a major Shia shrine.

Mr Maliki has tried to assure Iraqis that the momentum is shifting, but the representative of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the most senior Shia cleric in Iraq, told the BBC that religious leaders sensed “a real danger which threatens Iraq and its unity”.

Iraqis ‘failed’

Iraq’s military is awaiting President Obama’s decision on air strikes.

On Wednesday, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen Martin Dempsey, warned that the US military still lacked sufficient intelligence to take action. He told a congressional hearing that pilots would have difficulty knowing who they were attacking from the air.

Sheikh Abdul Mahdi Karbalai, spoke to the BBC’s John Simpson: ”This danger could spread”

Asked if the intervention might come too late, Gen Dempsey said: “There is very little that could have been done to overcome the degree to which the government of Iraq has failed its people. That is what has caused this problem.”

ISIS has exploited deep resentment among Iraq’s minority Sunni Arabs, who have long accused Mr Maliki of discriminating against them and monopolising power.

A spokesman for Mr Maliki’s Dawa party, Zuhair al-Nahar, said the prime minister had met Sunni Arab and Kurdish leaders and that they had “come out in a united stand”.

“My message from all the leaders in Iraq is that they feel abandoned, that they want America, Europe, the UN, to take immediate action to rectify the military situation,” he told the BBC.

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ISIS in Iraq

ISIS supporters demonstrate in front of the provincial government headquarters in Mosul, 360km (225 miles) north-west of Baghdad
The rebels now control the northern cities of Mosul and Tikrit

ISIS grew out of an al-Qaeda-linked organisation in Iraq

  • Estimated 10,000 fighters in Iraq and Syria
  • Joined in its offensives by other Sunni militant groups, including Saddam-era officers and soldiers, and disaffected Sunni tribal fighters
  • Exploits standoff between Iraqi government and the minority Sunni Arab community, which complains that Shia Prime Minister Nouri Maliki is monopolising power
  • ISIS led by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, an obscure figure regarded as a battlefield commander and tactician

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