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Turkish soldiers kill 18 IS fighters attacking Iraqi base

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his forces 'neutralised' attack on Bashiqa near Mosul, with no casualties among Turks
Turkish forces are training Kurdish peshmerga in Bashiqa (AFP)
By AFP

Turkish troops have killed 18 members of the Islamic State group after they launched an attack on a camp used to train Iraqi fighters outside the Iraqi city of Mosul, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said.

Turkish forces have been using the Bashiqa camp, just outside Mosul, to train local Iraqi fighters to retake the city from IS.

"Eighteen members of the Daesh terror organisation who wanted to infiltrate Bashiqa were neutralised," Erdogan said in televised comments after Friday prayers in Istanbul, using another name for the IS group. 

"None of our soldiers were wounded," he added.

It was not immediately clear what nature of attack IS had launched but Erdogan said that the Turkish forces were ready to repel any kind of assault.

"Our armed forces there, our officers providing the training, are prepared for any kind of attacks or raids, or anything that happens," said Erdogan.

The presence of the Turkish troops, while welcomed by the local authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan, has become a bone of contention with the central Iraqi government which angrily called for the Turkish troops to leave last month.

Turkey in December withdrew some of the troops after also coming under US pressure. But it is unclear how many remain at the camp.

Erdogan said on Friday that the latest attack showed how right Turkey was to station armed forces at the camp to protect the Turkish officers who are providing the training for the Iraqis.

"They are doing what needs to be done at the right time and will continue to do so," he said.  

Four Turkish soldiers were wounded on 16 December when IS militants fired mortars on the training camp, in an attack that also left two Iraqis dead.

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