Twenty-five dead after attempted jailbreak from prisons near Baghdad


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BAGHDAD // Jailbreak attempts at two major prisons outside Baghdad have claimed the lives of at least 25 members of Iraq's security forces, while a car bombing targeting soldiers yesterday killed another 12, according to officials.

The prison attacks that began late Sunday at lock-ups in Taji and Abu Ghraib, both in the outskirts of the capital, were the latest indication of deteriorating security conditions across the country.

The assailants detonated bombs and lobbed mortar rounds at Taji prison, 20 kilometres north of Baghdad. A suicide car bomber then attacked the main gate while a second suicide bomber blew himself up nearby, sparking clashes between militants and the guards, according to police.

As the battle raged for about two hours outside, rioting inmates set fire to blankets and furniture, police said.

Fifteen soldiers were killed and 13 others were wounded in the Taji attack, they said. At least six among the militants were also reported killed.

A similar raid unfolded at the prison in Abu Ghraib in Baghdad's western suburbs. Insurgents there struck the prison walls with mortar rounds and a car bomb, and at least one militant blew himself up at the main gate.

Ten policemen were killed and 19 others were wounded, they added. Four militants were reported killed in that attack.

Security forces reported finding undetonated car bombs and explosive belts used by suicide bombers near both prisons after the attacks.

Local media and jihadist internet forums reported some prisoners had managed to escape, but authorities have not reported any breakouts.

In a separate incident early Monday, a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laded car into an army patrol in a residential area in the northern city of Mosul, killing at least 12 people, police and medical officials said.

A surge of attacks has killed more than 450 Iraqis since the start of Ramadan on July 10. It comes amid a larger spike in bloodshed in recent months that is raising fears of a return to the widespread sectarian killing that pushed the country to the brink of civil war after the 2003 US-led invasion.