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Iraqi Military Launches Major Op to Retake Falluja from Daesh

Iraqi Military Launches Major Op to Retake Falluja from Daesh
folder_openIraq access_time7 years ago
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Local Editor

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the launching of an offensive to retake the Daesh stronghold of Falluja after the military told residents on Sunday to get ready to leave before fighting started.

Iraqi Military Launches Major Op to Retake Falluja from Daesh

"Zero hour for the liberation of Falluja has arrived. The moment of great victory has drawn near and Daesh has no choice but to flee," Abadi said on his official Twitter feed, using an Arabic acronym for the terrorist group.

He said the offensive would be conducted by the army, police, counterterrorism forces, local tribal fighters and popular mobilization forces. A US-led coalition that has bombed Daesh in Iraq and neighboring Syria for nearly two years was expected to provide air support.

Falluja, a longtime bastion of terrorists, 50 km west of Baghdad, was the first city to fall to the militants, in January 2014, six months before the group declared a so-called caliphate spanning large parts of Iraq and Syria.

The Iraqi army, police and popular mobilization forces, backed by coalition air strikes, have surrounded Falluja since late last year, while the terrorists have been preventing residents from leaving for months.

Families who cannot flee should raise white flags to mark their location in the city, the military's media unit said in a statement on state television, a tactic employed with some success in other recent offensives.

Deputy District Council Chairman Falih al-Essawi said three corridors would be opened for civilians to camps west, southwest and southeast of the city, and a subsequent military statement said some residents had begun to flee.

"Our goal is to liberate civilians from Daesh's repression and terrorism," Abadi said in a televised speech.

Residents told Reuters about 20 families set out from a southern front-line neighborhood late on Saturday but that only half of them made it out. Some were intercepted by Daesh, while others were killed by explosives planted along the road by the terrorist group, the residents said.

The United Nations and Human Rights Watch said last month that residents were facing acute shortages of food and medicine during a siege by government forces. Aid has not reached the city since the Iraqi military recaptured nearby Ramadi, the Anbar provincial capital, in December.

Essawi told a local television channel on Sunday that more than 75,000 civilians remained in Falluja, in keeping with a recent US military estimate of 60,000 to 90,000. About 300,000 people lived in the Euphrates River city before the war.

Known as the "City of Minarets and Mother of Mosques," Falluja is a focus for Sunni Muslim faith and identity in Iraq. It was badly damaged in two offensives by US forces against al-Qaeda insurgents in 2004.

Saad al-Hadithi, a spokesman for Abadi, said the city's "liberation" would help restore normal life to Anbar province, over which Islamic State took nearly complete control in 2014.

Following recent government offensives in Rutba and Hit, control of Falluja would secure the road more than 500 km from Baghdad to the Jordanian border and northwards to Haditha, 190 km northwest of the capital.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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