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Australian NGO worker killed while defusing Isis bomb in Iraq

The man was reportedly killed instantly when the bomb containing up to seven kilograms of explosives blew up

Isabel Coles,Mustafa Mahmoud
Tuesday 17 May 2016 12:40 EDT
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Isis were driven out of Daquq last year but left behind hundreds of improvised explosive devices
Isis were driven out of Daquq last year but left behind hundreds of improvised explosive devices (This content is subject to copyright.)

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An Australian working for a land mine clearance charity was killed in northern Iraq on Tuesday while trying to defuse a bomb planted by Isis militants, three of his colleagues said.

The man was working under the non-profit Swiss Foundation for Mine Action (FSD) in the Daquq area, around 200 km north of Baghdad. Isis were driven out of Daquq last year but left behind hundreds of improvised explosive devices.

FSD programme manager Alex Van Roy said when the man was killed instantly when the bomb containing up to seven kilograms of explosives blew up.

He said the family of the victim had asked that his name be withheld.

FSD has removed some 500 homemade bombs in the Daquq area since it began working there around two months ago, Kurdish FSD team member Aso Sabah al-Din said.

The team of two dozen includes both expatriates and Kurdish forces who control the area and who say they do not have the capabilities to deal with the bombs left by Isis.

Reuters

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