Iraqi forces killed six suspected Al-Qaeda militants during a search operation north of Baghdad on Monday, as two soldiers and five civilians also died in attacks, officials said.
Iraqi forces killed six suspected Al-Qaeda militants during a search operation north of Baghdad on Monday, as two soldiers and five civilians also died in attacks, officials said.
Security forces have launched operations targeting militants in various areas in recent days, including in the Baghdad region.
On Monday, security forces killed six militants during clashes with "Al-Qaeda remnants" in the area of Sulaiman Bek, a town north of the capital, army Staff Lieutenant General Abdulamir al-Zaidi said.
Zaidi, who himself narrowly escaped a blast that killed nine soldiers on Saturday, said 10 militants were captured and two car bombs and three motorcycle bombs were disabled.
During the operation a roadside bomb exploded near a military vehicle, killing one soldier, Zaidi said.
Sulaiman Bek was briefly seized by militants in late April before security forces backed in.
And last month, scores of militants launched an attack on the town, drawing security forces away from a nearby highway. Gunmen then set up a checkpoint, stopped truck drivers and executed 14 who were Shiite Muslims.
Security forces in Baghdad area, meanwhile, continued an operation dubbed "Avenge the Martyrs", a defense ministry statement said.
It said that over a period of 24 hours, security forces arrested 85 people wanted under an anti-terrorism law and detained a further 192 suspects.
They also discovered three car bomb factories and 219 bombs as well as weapons and explosives, it said.
As security forces hunted militants, the death toll from attacks continued to mount.
In Madain, south of Baghdad, gunmen with automatic weapons shot dead a generator owner and his son.
Another two people were killed by gunmen in Hilla, also south of the capital.
And in the northern province of Nineveh, a car bomb killed a soldier and wounded five others, while gunmen killed a civilian.