Islamic State kills five policemen near Iraq's Baiji refinery

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Islamic State has killed five policemen in a town near Iraq's biggest refinery, in an attack that may help ease pressure on some of its fighters trapped in the strategically important facility, a security official said on Wednesday. The official in a regional security command center said the insurgents mounted the operation at Tal Albu Jarad village as part of a battle for control of Baiji refinery, which has changed hands several times. After receiving reinforcements, Islamic State militants recaptured three neighborhoods in the town of Baiji near the refinery, but fresh clashes have erupted there, the security official said. The fighting has left some Islamic State fighters trapped in the refinery, besieged by government forces and militias. Iraq's U.S.-backed government is focused on two key areas in its bid to loosen the grip of Islamic State, which controls a third of major oil producer Iraq and large parts of neighboring Syria. As well as the battle over Baiji in the north, Iraqi government forces are hoping to oust Islamic State in Anbar, a vast western province mostly held by the insurgents. Islamic State insurgents killed 12 Iraqi soldiers at a military barracks in Anbar as the country's defense minister Khaled al-Obeidi visited a nearby airbase, security sources said. Warplanes responded with attacks killing 13 militants in the province, said the sources. Islamic State has threatened to march on Baghdad, a scenario that is unlikely given the large numbers of security forces and their Shi'ite militia allies in and around the capital. But the group has claimed responsibility for suicide bombings and roadside bomb attacks in Baghdad. On Wednesday, six people were killed by bombings in different parts of the city, medical and police sources said. (Reporting by Baghdad bureau; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Ralph Boulton)