Iraqi security forces entered the country's largest refinery for the
first time on Tuesday after months of battling Islamic State militants who had
surrounded it, a police colonel and state television said.
If confirmed, the recovery of the facility could provide critical
momentum for government forces charged with restoring stability in a country
facing its worst security crisis since dictator Saddam Hussein was toppled in
2003.
State television flashed news of the advance and
broadcast what it said was live footage of the complex from outside its walls.
No security forces were visible.
"In this area,
terrorists were stationed to the left and right. If God is willing, Baiji will
be the main key to liberating each span of Iraq," the commander of
provincial security operations, Abdel Wahab al-Sa'adi, told the broadcaster.
Islamic State seized the
city of Baiji and surrounded the sprawling refinery during that first advance
in June.
U.S-led air strikes have
prevented the Islamist group, which swept through northern Iraq in June almost
unopposed by the Iraqi army, from making significant further territorial gains
for its self-proclaimed caliphate.
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