Jordan said Wednesday that a raid near its border with Syria that killed seven suspected extremists had foiled attacks being plotted by the Takfiri group, ISIL, in the kingdom.
Jordan said Wednesday that a raid near its border with Syria that killed seven suspected extremists had foiled attacks being plotted by the Takfiri group, ISIL, in the kingdom.
ISIL (so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Levant) had planned "attacks against civilian and military sites in order to destabilize national security," Jordan's intelligence services said in a statement.
An officer in the security forces was also killed in the raid on a building in Irbid, 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Amman, that sparked several hours of fighting until dawn on Wednesday, officials said.
"The terrorists refused to surrender and put up strong resistance using automatic weapons," the statement said, adding that the dead ectremists were wearing suicide vests.
Thirteen people linked to the cell were arrested and automatic weapons and explosives were seized, it added.
Irbid is just a few kilometers from the Syrian border where Jordanian security forces regularly detain drug traffickers and Takfiris attempting to join extremist groups in Syria.
Jordan hosts more than 630,000 of the roughly 4.6 million Syrian refugees overseas, according to the UN refugee agency.
The Jordanian government gives a much higher estimate of 1.4 million, saying many of them are unregistered.