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이라크 "IS 지도자 알바그다디 차량행렬 폭격…생사 불명"

이라크 정보당국은 10일(현지시간)  이라크 군이 수니파 무장조직 '이슬람국가'(IS)의 지도자 아부 바크르 알바그다디의 차량행 렬을 폭격했다고 11일 밝혔다.

알바그다디는 공습을 받고서 차를 이용해 현장을 빠져나갔으며 그의 생사나  부 상 여부, 행방은 알려지지 않았다고 확인을 유보했다.

정보당국은 성명을 통해 "알바그다디의 차량행렬은 (시리아에서) 이라크 안바르 주 서부 국경지역 고지대인 알카라블라에서 열리는 고위급 회의에 가던 중이었다"며 "현지의 정확한 정보통과 공조를 통해 공습했다"고 설명했다.

차량행렬뿐 아니라 알카라블라의 회합 장소도 폭격해 IS 지도부의 여러 고위급 인사가 죽거나 다쳤다고 덧붙였다.

이와 관련, 로이터통신은 이라크군의 폭격으로 집 2채와 IS의 지도자급 인사  8 명이 사상했지만, 이 가운데 알바그다디는 포함되지 않았다고 현지 소식통을 인용해 보도했다.

이란 IRNA통신은 IS에 정통한 소식통을 인용해 이 폭격으로 알바그다디가  부상 했고 측근 3명이 죽었다고 전했다.

사망한 측근은 IS의 선전전을 담당하는 오마르 알시샤니, 최고 사령관급인 아부 사에드 알카르불리, 이라크와 맞닿은 시리아 아부카말 지역의 사령관 아부 아니스 알수리 등 3명이라고 이 매체는 보도했다.

일부 이라크 현지 언론에선 알바그다디가 폭격을 당해 현장에서 즉사했다는  보 도도 나왔다.

그간 알바그다디에 대한 폭격과 그의 사망·부상설은 그간 여러 번 보도됐지만 대부분 진위가 확인되지 않았다.

미국 정부는 "이라크 측의 성명을 봤지만, 사실 여부를 확인할 수 있는 정보가 없다"고 밝혔다. (연합)


<관련 영문 기사>

Iraq claims IS chief Baghdadi hit in air raid

Iraq claimed Sunday to have struck a convoy carrying Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in an air raid near the Syrian border but said his fate was unknown.

In Syria, meanwhile, regime troops backed by Russian air strikes made progress on two fronts but were battling other rebel groups.

And Syria’s opposition National Coalition said it will boycott UN-proposed peace talks, citing the Russian air strikes among a list of grievances.

Iraqi aircraft hit Baghdadi’s convoy as it was “moving towards Karabla to attend a meeting of the Daesh terrorist leaders,” an Iraqi security statement said.

Karabla is on the Euphrates barely five kilometres (three miles) from the Syrian border in western Anbar, a vast Iraqi province which has long been a Sunni insurgent stronghold.

The statement issued by Iraq’s “war media cell” said Baghdadi was “transported in a vehicle” after the strike but added that “his health status was unknown”.

The meeting place was also struck in the operation and several IS leaders already gathered there were killed or wounded, it said.

Interior ministry spokesman Saad Maan told AFP that “the strike was yesterday (Saturday) at noon”.

In Washington, a US military official said: “We’ve seen the Iraqi statement about al-Baghdadi but have no info that confirms it.”

Baghdadi’s death would give the war against the most violent jihadist organisation in modern history a much-needed boost, but such claims have been made in the past.

Baghdadi’s apparent survival following similar claims, including one in November 2014 of a strike in the same area, has only added to his mystique.

The Iraqi jihadist chief is said to have been born in Samarra in 1971, but little is known about the man with a $10 million US bounty on his head.

Baghdadi apparently joined the insurgency after the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, at one point spending time in an American military prison in the country’s south.

His whereabouts have been the subject of constant speculation since his only public appearance as IS chief last year, at a mosque in the Iraqi city of Mosul days after the proclamation of a cross-border “caliphate”.

A coalition led by the United States, which occupied Iraq for eight years before withdrawing in 2011, began air strikes against IS in August last year.

More than 7,000 strikes later, IS has conceded some of territory it took last year but has held its ground in other areas and even made fresh conquests, such as the city of Ramadi in Iraq and Palmyra in Syria.

Russia joined the fray on September 30, launching an air campaign it said would target IS, but most of its efforts seem focused on protecting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Syrian troops Sunday were gaining ground on two fronts: in central Hama province around the Damascus-Aleppo highway and in the northern part of regime stronghold Latakia province.

In Hama, regime forces had taken three villages east of the highway and were seeking to secure control of an area to its west.

“This offensive is intended to confront the rebels in the Sahl al-Ghab plain that is at the intersection of Hama, Latakia and Idlib provinces,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor.

Alawites from the same sect as Assad live in the south and west of the strategic 1,000 square kilometre (385 square mile) plain, while the north and east are mostly Sunni.

Rebels have sought to capture parts of the area, advancing particularly from Idlib province which is held by the Army of Conquest alliance that includes Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.

In Moscow, Russia’s defence ministry said its warplanes had hit 63 targets in Syria in the past 24 hours and intercepted radio traffic showing “growing panic” in IS.

Human Rights Watch, meanwhile, on Sunday accused Russia of being behind the use of new advanced cluster munitions in Syria.

The New York-based group said it had obtained photographs showing cluster munitions were dropped on a village southwest of second city Aleppo on October 4.

On the political front, Syria’s opposition National Coalition said it will boycott talks proposed by UN peace envoy Staffan de Mistura because of concerns over his plan and Russia’s air strikes.

It cited “adherence to the Geneva communique and (UN) Security Council resolutions and an end to Russian aggression to be the basis for the resumption of the negotiation process”.

The Geneva communique was agreed at a peace conference in 2012 that drew up baselines for a peace deal including a transitional governing body. (AFP)

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