‘Friendly fire’ by Iraqi drone kills nine anti-IS fighters

Nine fighters from a Shiite Muslim militia battling Islamic State were killed in northern Iraq when an Iraqi army aircraft fired at them in error, security and militia sources said on Sunday.
The fighters were responding to an IS attack west of Camp Speicher, a former US base outside the city of Tikrit, said Ahmed al-Assadi, spokesman for the Hashid Shaabi, a coalition of mostly Shiite militias fighting the militants alongside Iraq’s military.
More than a dozen fighters were wounded, he said.
READ MORE: Pentagon shares blame with Iraq for deadly friendly fire incident
Colonel Mohammed al-Assadi, spokesman for the joint police and military operations command in Salahuddin province, said that at 10.30 pm on Saturday, an Iraqi army aviation drone opened fire due to mistaken coordinates.
Assadi said the drone was being fired at from the ground and “fired on the advancing Jund al-Imam forces, killing nine and wounding around 15”, he added, referring to the militia.
Spokesmen for Iraq’s defence ministry and joint operations command were not immediately available for comment.
