Suspected terrorists with links to ISIS on Saturday fired rockets containing unspecified chemical substances into a residential part of the northern Iraqi town of Taza, Iraqi security officials told CNN.
The attacks caused an unspecified number of casualties from suffocation, burns and dehydration.
Taza, which has a predominantly Shiite Turkmen population, is located about 12 miles (20 kilometers) south of Kirkuk.
A U.S. Special Operations team captured a senior ISIS operative involved in chemical weapons about three weeks ago. Several officials have said U.S.-led warplanes have since conducted airstrikes targeting chemical weapons sites based on information provided by this man, who has been identified as Sleiman Daoud Al-Bakkar.
His capture, however, has not stopped alleged chemical attacks by ISIS or other terrorists associated with the Islamist militant group.
Earlier this week, for instance, officials in Iraq’s Kirkuk province claimed that around 100 people were injured in suspected chemical attack, also in Taza.
Pictures from that attack showed victims with swollen eyes and skin burns.