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Iraq crisis: Key oil refinery 'seized by rebels' Iraq crisis: Key oil refinery 'seized by rebels'
(35 minutes later)
Iraq's biggest oil refinery at Baiji, north of Baghdad, is reported to have been fully captured by Sunni rebels after days of heavy fighting. Sunni rebels in Iraq say they have fully captured the country's main oil refinery at Baiji, north of Baghdad.
The refinery had been under siege for 10 days with the militant offensive being repulsed several times.The refinery had been under siege for 10 days with the militant offensive being repulsed several times.
A rebel spokesman said the refinery would now be handed over to local tribes to administer. The complex supplies a third of Iraq's refined fuel and the battle has already led to petrol rationing.
Insurgents, led by the group Isis, are expanding their control of towns in the north and west. Insurgents, led by the group Isis, are expanding their control of towns in the north and west and have captured all border crossings to Syria and Jordan.
They are bearing down on a vital dam near Haditha, and have captured all of the border crossings to Syria and Jordan from government forces. They are also bearing down on a vital dam near Haditha.
A rebel spokesman said the Baiji refinery, in Salahuddin province, would now be handed over to local tribes to administer.
The spokesman said that the advance towards Baghdad would continue.
The BBC's Jim Muir in Irbil, northern Iraq, says the capture of the refinery is essential if the rebels are to keep control of the areas they have conquered and to supply the captured city of Mosul with energy.
Earlier, US Secretary of State John Kerry vowed "intense and sustained support" for Iraq after meeting key politicians in the capital, Baghdad.
He said attacks by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) were a threat to Iraq's existence, and the next days and weeks would be critical.