BAGHDAD, Aug 17: Gunmen killed 12 policemen and soldiers while a truck bomb hit a port in Iraq on Saturday, the latest in a surge in violence that authorities have failed to curb.

Security forces have in recent weeks carried out some of their biggest operations since the 2011 withdrawal of US forces, but analysts and diplomats have said authorities have not addressed the root causes of the violence.

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has nevertheless vowed to press on with the campaign in a bid to combat Iraq's worst violence since 2008, and on Saturday the interior ministry's spokesman announced the killing of an alleged senior Al Qaeda-linked militant.

In Saturday's deadliest attack, gunmen opened fire on an army post in the town of Madain, just southeast of Baghdad, in a pre-dawn attack that left five soldiers dead and three others wounded, police and a medical source said.

Among the dead was a lieutenant colonel. The gunmen fled the scene after the attack, and security forces, who cordoned off the scene, launched a manhunt.

North of Baghdad, militants shot dead four police who were buying ice near the city of Tikrit.

Security forces often purchase large blocks of ice to distribute to nearby checkpoints in order to cope with Iraq's sweltering summer heat.

In another attack north of the capital, gunmen killed three soldiers in the restive Muqdadiyah area of Diyala province.

And in the far south, a truck rigged with explosives blew up in the parking lot of the port of Umm Qasr, wounding three people and damaging a docked ship and several nearby trucks.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Sunni militants linked to Al Qaeda and opposed to the Shia-led government frequently carry out attacks against security forces.

Attacks have killed more than 3,480 people since the beginning of 2013, according to figures compiled by AFP.

Analysts and diplomats attribute the increased violence to anger in the Sunni Arab community over its alleged ill treatment at the hands of the Shia-led authorities.

Security forces have been carrying out wide-ranging operations in multiple provinces including Baghdad, after brazen July assaults on two prisons, claimed by an Al Qaeda front group.

Maliki has said more than 800 alleged militants have been arrested and dozens killed in the operations.

Interior ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan said on Saturday that security forces had killed a top Al Qaeda militant in Tikrit and detained two of his aides.

He did not identify the man killed.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Back in parliament
Updated 27 Jul, 2024

Back in parliament

It is ECP's responsibility to set right all the wrongs it committed in the Feb 8 general elections.
Upholding rights
27 Jul, 2024

Upholding rights

EVEN a perceived threat to civil rights and freedom of expression undermines democracy; it impedes the enforcement ...
Brutal crime
27 Jul, 2024

Brutal crime

THE horrific incident of a woman allegedly gang-raped in front of her husband and three-year-old daughter near...
Judicial constraints
Updated 26 Jul, 2024

Judicial constraints

The fact that it is being prescribed by the legislature will be questioned, given the political context.
Macabre spectacle
26 Jul, 2024

Macabre spectacle

Israel knows that regardless of the party that wins the presidency, America’s ‘ironclad’ support for its genocidal endeavours will continue.