Iraq forces claim taking full control of Fallujah

 

Iraq forces claim taking  full control of Fallujah
A tank belonging to the Iraqi army fires towards Daesh bases in Fallujah.

Fallujah - Daesh militants evicted from last bastion of Jolan

By AFP

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Published: Sun 26 Jun 2016, 6:00 PM

Last updated: Sun 26 Jun 2016, 11:15 PM

Iraqi forces took the Daesh group's last positions in the city of Fallujah on Sunday, establishing full control over one of the militants' most emblematic bastions after a month-long operation.
Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi had already declared victory on June 17 after Daesh defences collapsed, with Iraqi forces facing only limited resistance in subsequent clearing operations.
The offensive saw tens of thousands of civilians risk death to flee their homes, leaving Iraq to grapple with a humanitarian crisis as its forces prepare to attack the last remaining major Daesh hub of Mosul.
"The Iraqi security forces now control the whole city of Fallujah," said Sabah Al Noman, spokesman for the elite counter-terrorism service (CTS) that has been leading the fight.
CTS fighters on Sunday eased into Jolan, a northwestern neighbourhood of Fallujah where the last Daesh fighters in the city were believed to be holed up.
"Jolan was Daesh's last stronghold in the city and Fallujah is now free of the threat posed by Daesh terrorists," he said. "It did not take more than two hours for CTS to retake Jolan. Daesh did not fire a single bullet," Noman said. "This proves that Daesh was defeated even before our forces got there."
A spokesman for the Joint Operations Command coordinating the fight against Daesh said some militant pockets remained northwest of Fallujah and that the overall operation could not be considered over yet.
"We still have an ongoing fight northwest of Fallujah. We never made central Fallujah the ultimate goal of our operation... the aim is to clear the whole area," he said.
The offensive began on May 22-23 with an initial phase of staging operations aimed at tightening a months-old siege on Fallujah and led by the Hashed Al Shaabi, a paramilitary organisation dominated by Tehran-backed militias.
Qassem Suleimani, the powerful head of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards' overseas operations arm, was more visible than ever before in Iraq during the early days of the operation.
The US-led coalition offered some aerial support but was less involved than six months ago during the operations to retake Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province in which Fallujah is also located.
The US had favoured focusing the battle on Mosul, the country's second city, where Daesh proclaimed a "caliphate" straddling Iraq and Syria two years ago almost to the day.
While some pockets of Daesh fighters on the outskirts of Fallujah remain to be flushed out, the jihadist organisation does not appear in a position to contest the area any longer.
The loss of Fallujah, which looms large in militant mythology and in 2004 saw US forces suffer some of their worst losses since the Vietnam War, is a blow to Daesh.


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