Iraq forces push into Tikrit, parliament votes on speaker

Shiites volunteers, loyal to Muslim Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, take positions during a military advance in areas under the control of Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), in the town of Samarra, in the province of Tikrit, on July 12, 2014. AFP Photo

Iraqi security forces advanced into the militant-held city of Tikrit in a renewed assault on Tuesday, as the country's fractious parliament held a long-delayed vote on a new speaker.
      
World powers and Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, have piled pressure on MPs to put aside their differences amid a major jihadist-led onslaught that has overrun territory in the north and west, but they have so far failed to do so.
      
Security forces began the attack on Tikrit on Tuesday morning, aiming to revitalise an operation to retake it that began more than two weeks ago but had bogged down south of the city.
      
"Iraqi forces began a military operation to liberate the city of Tikrit and our forces were able to control the southern part of the city," Ahmed Abdullah Juburi, the governor of Salaheddin province of which Tikrit is the capital, told AFP.
      
An army colonel said the police academy and a hospital in Tikrit had been retaken, and Juburi confirmed those facilities were in government hands, along with the governorate headquarters.
      
The city was seized by militants on June 11 as part of a sweeping offensive that has overrun large areas of five provinces since it began last month.
      
Violence also struck south of Baghdad on Tuesday, with bombings in the Madain area killing nine people, including four soldiers, officials said.
      
The blasts and the new push for Tikrit came a day after the Pentagon said that American military teams sent to Iraq last month have completed their assessment of Iraqi security forces.
      
The details were not released, but The New York Times said one conclusion was that only roughly...

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