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IRAQ WARS
IMF plans $833 mn in emergency aid to Iraq
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) June 5, 2015


Iraq forces repel car bomb attack in Anbar: officers
Baghdad (AFP) June 6, 2015 - Iraqi security forces backed by air support used anti-tank missiles to repel Islamic State group suicide bombers driving explosives-rigged vehicles in Anbar province on Saturday, officers said.

An army colonel said security forces used Russian Kornet missiles to destroy two of the vehicles in the Nadhim al-Taqsim area west of Baghdad, while an Iraqi air strike destroyed the third.

Interior ministry spokesman Saad Maan said four vehicles were destroyed, and that the air support came from the US-led coalition against IS.

Security forces also used missiles to repel attacks on Anbar bases on Thursday by jihadists using vehicle bombs -- one of the Islamic State group's deadliest tactics.

Last month, IS used an unprecedented wave of truck and car bombs when it seized Ramadi, farther west, after which the US said it would send 2,000 anti-tank systems to help repel such attacks.

The International Monetary Fund said Friday it was preparing $833 million in emergency financial assistance to Iraq as the country battles the Islamic State insurgency.

The IMF said a mission had agreed on the aid with the Iraqi government under the Fund's Rapid Financing Instrument program, subject to IMF management approval, which is likely to come in July.

"The Fund is ready to assist Iraq in its efforts to tackle the economic impact of the conflict with ISIS (Islamic State) and the decline in global oil prices," it said.

"The armed conflict continues to strain the country's resources and has created a humanitarian tragedy, with an estimated three million internally displaced people. The violence has also caused extensive damage to infrastructure and private sector assets."

The IMF said the Iraq economy contracted 2.1 percent last year "mainly because of the violence," and might only grow 0.5 percent this year.

Meanwhile, the crash in oil prices has hit hard the country's foreign earnings and helped widen the government's budget shortfall.

Jordan accepts family request for burial of Iraq's Aziz
Amman (AFP) June 6, 2015 - Jordan said Saturday that former Iraqi foreign minister Tareq Aziz will be buried on its soil after approving a request from his family to hold the funeral in the kingdom.

Aziz, who served as the voice of Saddam Hussein's regime for two decades, died in hospital on Friday aged 79.

"The Jordanian authorities have accepted a request from the family of Tareq Aziz to bring his remains to be buried here in Jordan on humanitarian grounds," an official said.

Aziz gave himself up to the Americans a month after the March 2003 US-led invasion that ousted Saddam. His family fled to Jordan the same year and has been living in the capital since then.

Jordan was in the process of contacting the Iraqi authorities about the matter, the source said.

Aziz's son Ziad told AFP that his family had yet to hear from the Iraqi government or its embassy in Amman to inform them whether or not they can receive the body or bury it in Jordan.

He said the only information he had on the whereabouts of his father's body was from Iraqi television reports that it had been transferred to Nasiriyah, where he was imprisoned.

"But no one has contacted my mother who is currently in Baghdad to advise if she can receive the body," he added.

Aziz died of a heart attack.

He had long been in poor health, suffering from heart and respiratory problems, high blood pressure and diabetes, and his family repeatedly called for his release from custody.

Aziz had been on death row since October 2010 after being convicted of murder and crimes against humanity.


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IRAQ WARS
Iraqi forces foil bomb attacks on bases: officer
Baghdad (AFP) June 4, 2015
Iraqi security forces used anti-tank missiles to repel suicide bombers driving explosives-rigged vehicles who attacked two military bases west of Baghdad, an army officer said Thursday. The day before, an air strike in northern Iraq destroyed one of the Islamic State group's largest car bomb factories, which may help to curb one of the jihadists' deadliest tactics, officials said. IS att ... read more


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