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Oil pipeline
set ablaze in Iraq
Middle East Desk Report
KIRKUK—Suspected insurgents set ablaze an oil pipeline near the northern
Iraqi city of Kirkuk on Friday, halting the flow as firefighters
scrambled to tackle a massive blaze, police said.
“According to first reports the explosion was an act of sabotage,
probably by insurgents who blew up a subsidiary pipeline with an
improvised explosive device,” a police spokesman said.
The attack happened near Al-Safra, about 60 kilometres (40 miles) west
of Kirkuk, the main oil city in northern Iraq, on a pipeline that
carries crude from the province’s rich oilfields to the refinery city of
Baiji, he told.
Huge licks of flame and plumes of smoke could be seen billowing into the
sky as firefighting teams arrived at the scene to try and extinguish the
blaze. A spokesman for the Northern Oil Company said they expected the
flames to be brought under control within a few hours, and that the flow
of oil through the pipeline had been halted in the meantime.
The damage would be assessed after the blaze had been extinguished, the
spokesman said. Insurgents have launched deadly attacks over recent
months in Kirkuk, an ethnically volatile city claimed both by the Arabs
and Kurds. Longstanding Kurdish demands for Kirkuk to be incorporated in
their autonomous region in northern Iraq are due to be put to a
referendum by December 30.
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