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    Two injured in north Iraq cleaver attack

    DOHUK (AFP) – Two people were injured in a cleaver attack on an Assyrian celebration in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, officials said, pointing to the Islamic State (IS) extremist group.

    The region’s Asayesh police force said it was investigating the attack in the city of Dohuk.

    The region’s autonomous Kurdish authorities said the attacker was Syrian and influenced “by terrorist ideology affiliated to Daesh”, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

    Kurdish media said the attacker used a cleaver.

    According to a police source, the attack took place in a market and targeted the Akitu springtime celebrations observed by members of the Assyrian community to mark the first day of their calendar year.

    A scouts marching band performs during Akitu in Dohuk, Iraq. PHOTO: AP

    “A 65-year-old woman was hit on the head” and suffered a haemorrhage that did not require surgery, Dohuk medical authorities said, adding that her condition was “stable”.

    Another 25-year-old man suffered a minor scalp wound, the authorities added.

    Dohuk governor Ali Tatar told a press conference that “our security forces arrested the suspect… the investigation is ongoing”.

    Extremist cells are still active in Iraq, sporadically attacking the army and police, particularly in rural and remote areas. A recent United Nations report said government-led counter-terrorism operations have resulted in the deaths of nearly half of IS’ senior leaders in Iraq.

    However, it warned the group could use the unstable situation in Syria following the overthrow of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad, a member of the Alawite minority, to reinforce its position.

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