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The
U.N. children's fund has issued a stark warning to Iraqi troops and
Islamic State militants to spare the children amid a battle to retake
the city of Fallujah city. UNICEF said on Wednesday …
Fallujah Fight Stalled by Fierce Fighting, Civilian Concerns
The Iraqi military's advance into Fallujah was stalled Wednesday by
fierce resistance from Islamic State fighters and concerns over
protecting tens of thousands of civilians still trapped inside the
strategic city, officials said.
With the operation in its second week, convoys of special forces could
only inch forward on the dusty southern outskirts of the city as a
handful of airstrikes sent up plumes of white smoke above clusters of
low buildings on the fringes of the city's dense urban terrain.
More than 50,000 people are believed to be still inside Fallujah, and
the U.N. estimated that 20,000 of them are children, warning that they
face a dire humanitarian situation in addition to the risk of forced
recruitment by the extremists.
In a visit to the front line, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi noted the
slow pace and emphasized the priorities of the operation were protecting
civilian lives and minimizing Iraqi casualties, but he praised the
progress so far as a "remarkable advance."
Government troops will "hoist the Iraqi flag inside Fallujah in the
coming few days," vowed al-Abadi, wearing the black fatigues of the
counterterrorism force.
The operation to free Fallujah from the more than two-year grip of the
Islamic State was launched May 22, and it involves the Iraqi special
forces, militias consisting of mainly Shiite fighters, and U.S.-led
airstrikes.
Retaking the Sunni-majority city 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of
Baghdad would represent a huge victory for the Iraqi government because
Fallujah was one of the first major urban areas to fall to the IS
extremists in 2014 and has been a bastion of support for militant
anti-government sentiment in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
In 2004, Fallujah also was the site of some of the bloodiest urban
combat between American forces and the IS group's predecessor, al-Qaeda
in Iraq. More than 100 U.S. troops died and another 1,000 were wounded
fighting insurgents in house-to-house battles.
"Today's offensive on Fallujah is different from the one the Americans
fought in 2004," said Brig. Haider al-Obeidi. Unlike the insurgency that
U.S. forces fought in Fallujah and elsewhere in Iraq, IS fighters are
operating like a conventional military in addition to carrying out
suicide attacks and planting hidden bombs.
Progress against the IS militants has been slow due to their intense
resistance and the need to protect the civilians, said army Gen. Jalil
al-Sharifi.
The prime minister, speaking from the main operations room at a
sprawling military base just east of the center of Fallujah, said IS was
using civilians as human shields, and the government was urging
residents to leave via safe corridors or stay inside their homes.
"The main goal of the military operation now is to reduce civilian and army casualties," al-Abadi said.
The fight for Fallujah is expected to be long and hard because IS has
had more than two years to dig in and because of the dense urban
setting. Once Iraqi forces are in the city center, calling in airstrikes
will become more difficult due to the many civilians and the proximity
of friendly forces, according to the U.S.-led coalition.
Lt. Gen. Abdul Ghani al-Asadi said he expects to find more sympathy
among Fallujah's population for the Sunni-led militants of IS, which
some estimates have put at 500-700 fighters. That will make it harder to
differentiate between friend and foe.
"Given the long period IS controlled the city and how IS runs the city,
many of the population support them," al-Asadi said. Since the operation
began, the United Nations said it has received reports that about 500
men and boys have been detained for questioning because they were
identified as suspected IS sympathizers. Thousands of civilians have
fled Fallujah's mostly rural outskirts over the past two weeks.
Iraqi forces have imposed a tight blockade on the city, and Islamic
State militants are reportedly preventing residents from leaving.
Estimating the number of children still in Fallujah at 20,000, UNICEF
called on all parties to protect them and "provide safe passage to those
wishing to leave the city." Such an arrangement is unlikely to happen
because it would require negotiations between both sides.
The U.N. also said that violence in Iraq killed at least 867 people in May, an increase from the previous month.
In its monthly report, the U.N. mission to Iraq said at least 468
civilians were among the dead, while the rest were members of the
security forces. A total of 1,459 Iraqis were wounded last month, it
said.
In April, at least 741 Iraqis were killed and 1,374 wounded. The figures
do not include casualties from Anbar province, which includes Fallujah.
Baghdad was the worst affected in May, with 267 civilians killed and 740
wounded, mainly in bombings targeting security forces and the Shiite
majority.
Fallujah is the last major urban area controlled by the extremist group
in western Iraq. The militants still control Iraq's second-largest city,
Mosul, as well as smaller towns and areas in the west and north.
———
Associated Press writers Ali Abdulhassan on the southern outskirts of
Fallujah and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad contributed to this report.
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