Thursday, April 25, 2024 | Shawwal 15, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
27°C / 27°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Iraqi forces in final assault to take Hawija from IS

1125781
1125781
minus
plus

HAWIJA: Iraqi forces pushed into the IS group stronghold of Hawija on Wednesday, commanders said, stepping up their assault against one of the militants’ last enclaves in the country.


Government and allied forces backed by a US-led coalition launched an offensive last month to oust IS from Hawija, a longtime insurgent bastion.


The town is among the final holdouts from the territory seized by the militants in 2014 and its recapture would leave only a handful of remote outposts in IS hands. The Hawija operation’s commander, Lieutenant General Abdel Amir Yarallah, said the army, federal police and rapid response force had begun a major operation “to liberate the centre of Hawija and the neighbouring town of Riyadh”.


Federal police chief Raed Shakir Jawdat said in a statement that elite units had entered the city from the northwest amid artillery and missile bombardments of militant positions. “They are advancing and the goal is to take seven neighbourhoods of Hawija and 12 vital objectives,” he said, without providing more details.


The operation involves the army, the federal police, elite units, as well as tribal volunteers and the Hashed al Shaabi paramilitary force, mainly made up of Iran-trained militia.


The Hashed said its engineers were demining the route into Hawija and that IS fighters had retreated to the town centre after “their defences were breached”.


The militia said it had evacuated several dozen families from villages close to Hawija after they escaped militant attempts to use them as human shields.


The United Nations announced on Tuesday that an estimated 12,500 people had fled the town since the launch of the offensive to retake Hawija and surrounding areas last month.


The UN’s humanitarian affairs office (OCHA) said the number of people still in the town was unknown but could be as high 78,000.


It said humanitarian agencies have set up checkpoints, camps and emergency sites in the area capable of receiving more than 70,000 people who could flee.


Hawija, 230 km north of Baghdad, is one of just two areas of Iraq still held by IS, along with a stretch of the Euphrates Valley near the Syrian border which is also under attack.


Hawija has been an insurgent bastion since soon after the US-led invasion of 2003, earning it the nickname of “Kandahar in Iraq” for the ferocious resistance it put up similar to that in the Taliban militia’s citadel in Afghanistan.


The town’s mainly Arab population is deeply hostile both to the government in Baghdad and to the Kurds who form the historic majority in adjacent areas.


The town lies between the two main routes north from Baghdad — to second city Mosul, recaptured from IS in July, and to the city of Kirkuk and the autonomous Kurdish region.


The US-led coalition is also backing an Arab-Kurdish alliance, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), that is battling to


oust IS from its de facto Syrian capital Raqa. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon