Iraqi defence ministry says it has isolated Fallujah and completed first phase of campaign to retake city from ISIL.
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Fallujah: Iraqi forces 'closing in' on ISIL-held city
Iraqi defence ministry says it has isolated Fallujah and completed first phase of campaign to retake city from ISIL.
Iraqi
forces have surrounded Fallujah and completed the first phase of their
assault to retake the city from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL) armed group, officials have told Al Jazeera.
Hundreds of people fled the besieged city about 60km west of the
capital, Baghdad, on Friday amid rapidly deteriorating humanitarian
conditions as fighting between Iraqi forces and ISIL fighters
intensified.
Iraqi army promises victory in Fallujah ‘next week’
A defence ministry spokesman said on Saturday that Iraqi forces were
closing in on Fallujah, which has been under ISIL control since January
2014.
''Phase one is over and we have achieved our objectives," Brigadier
Rasool Yahya told Al Jazeera. "Our forces have isolated and surrounded
the city of Fallujah."
Security forces have safely evacuated many residents away from the
outskirts of the city - but some 50,000 people are still trapped inside.
"We are advancing on and closing in ... We are ready and the presence
of civilians inside the city could delay us," Yahya said. "The enemy
left the outskirts and stationed itself inside Fallujah."
Tens of thousands of Iraqi forces - made up of military, police and
militias, and backed by air power from a US-led coalition - last week
launched an offensive to retake the city.
The UN said nearly 800 people had escaped over the past week, but
most of those from the outskirts of the city, where ISIL control was
weaker.
"The situation inside Fallujah is getting critical by the day," Nasr
Muflahi, the Norwegian Refugee Council's Iraq director, said.
A convoy of Iraqi forces drives on a road during the advance towards Fallujah [Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters]
Iraqi military officials insisted that safe corridors would be
established to allow civilians to flee, but residents said ISIL
checkpoints along the city's main roads have made escape nearly
impossible.
Sheikh al-Jumaili, a member of Fallujah's tribal council, told Al
Jazeera that Shia militias were torching mosques and homes in al-Karmah,
a town some 16km northeast of Fallujah that was captured by Iraqi armed
forces on Friday.
Jumaili said the historic al-Karmah and Ibrahim Ali Hassoun Mosques
had been demolished with explosives, sectarian slogans had been scrawled
on a number of homes and buildings, and that furniture as well as
electrical appliances had been stolen by militias.
However, the Iraqi military dismissed the allegations as "fabrications".
"Our rules of engagement is not to attack mosques but when a mosque
becomes a centre for terror then we deal with it," Brigadier Yahya said.
"After every victory, we hear the fabrications about burning and
looting, these are fabrications from elements who are supporting ISIL to
defame our victory."
Some in Fallujah, a predominantly Sunni city, were reported to have
welcomed the takeover of the city by ISIL as an alternative to what they
considered their marginalisation at the hands of Shia-dominated
government. Locals, though, say conditions there have deteriorated under
the group's control.
Baghdad-based US Colonel Steve Warren said that over the last four
days, 20 strikes in the city had destroyed ISIL fighting positions and
gun emplacements.
"We've killed more than 70 enemy fighters, including Maher al-Bilawi,
who is the commander of ISIL forces in Fallujah," Warren said. "This,
of course, won't completely cause the enemy to stop fighting, but it's a
blow. And it creates confusion and it causes the second-in-command to
have to move up. It causes other leadership to have to move around," he
added.
Coalition officials estimated earlier this week that 500-700 ISIL
fighters remain in the city, according to a US military estimate, hiding
amongst the civilian population.
Fallujah is one of only two major Iraqi cities - the other being Mosul - still controlled by ISIL, also known as ISIS.
Armed groups in Fallujah fought the US occupation of Iraq and the
Shia-led authorities that replaced Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
The city on the Euphrates River had a prewar population of about
300,000. Known as the City of Minarets and Mother of Mosques, it was
badly damaged in two assaults by the US army in 2004.
Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
COPY http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/05/fallujah-iraqi-forces-closing-isil-held-city-160528125723150.html
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