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Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout

Update Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout
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Security forces are seen near a damaged building one day after the security incident at the city of Al Salt, Jordan, on August 11, 2018. (REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed)
Update Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout
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An ambulance and a Jordanian police car is seen one day after the security incident, at the city of Al Salt, Jordan, August 11, 2018. (Reuters)
Update Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout
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Security forces are seen near a damaged building one day after the security incident at the city of Al Salt, Jordan, on August 11, 2018. (REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed)
Updated 12 August 2018

Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout

Bodies of 3 suspected militants retrieved after Jordan shootout
  • Police have arrested 3 terror suspects so far
  • The raid comes a day after a rare bomb blast targeted security forces near Amman

AMMAN: Security forces on Sunday pulled the bodies of three suspected militants out of a partially collapsed building in Jordan’s central city of Salt following a shootout, a government spokeswoman said.
Security forces had raided the building in a search for those responsible for a bomb attack on a police van on Friday.
Government spokeswoman Jumana Ghunaimat said security forces had also seized automatic weapons in a “continuing operation.”
Four security personnel were killed during a shootout on Saturday evening with the suspected militants who had been holed in a building in the hillside city of Salt.
Ghuneimat said suspects rigged a building with explosives and detonated them when police raided it.

Twenty people were also injured, when a building collapsed during the raid, according to Al-Arabiya.
The security forces eventually arrested three suspects, Ghuneimat said, adding that the operation in Salt was still "ongoing".
Salt lies a few kilometers north of Al-Fuhais, a mostly Christian town.
Ghneimat said that the security forces raided the house in Salt after receiving a tip-off.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Friday's bomb blast and the identity of the suspects in Salt was not immediately known.

The Interior Ministry said the bomb that went off late Friday was planted in an area where a police vehicle usually stops during an ongoing music festival in the town of Fuheis, 12 kilometers (8 miles) west of the capital.

"It killed Sergeant Ali Adnan Qawqaza and wounded six other members of the patrol," the ministry said, adding that an investigation was underway into the cause of the blast.
Security forces had been deployed to protect the town's annual festival, which hosts prominent Arab music acts.
Prime Minister Omar Al-Razzaz vowed that Jordan would "not be complacent in the hunt for terrorists".
"Jordan will always be at the forefront of the fight against terrorism and obscurantist ideas which target the lives of innocents and try to undermine security and stability," he said in remarks carried by the official Petra news agency.
Jordan has played a key role in the US-led coalition fighting Daesh in neighboring Syria and Iraq, using its air force and allowing coalition forces to use its bases.
The Kingdom was hit by a string of militant attacks in 2016, including a suicide bombing in June that killed seven guards near the border with Syria that was claimed by Daesh.
Months later in December a shooting rampage, also claimed by Daesh, killed 10 people including a Canadian tourist.

(With Reuters)