Jihadists defending positions in Hit, significant bastion in Anbar province, after security officials vowed to retake key hub on Euphrates. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
HIT
- Terrified residents were fleeing the Iraqi town of Hit as security
forces closed in Tuesday and jihadist fighters hunkered down to defend
one of their main bastions in Anbar province.
After
regaining control of Anbar provincial capital Ramadi from the Islamic
State group earlier this year, Iraqi forces have been advancing up the
Euphrates Valley in recent weeks.
Officials are vowing to launch a final operation to retake Hit, a key hub along the Euphrates, in the coming days.
Police
colonel Fadhel al-Nimrawi said thousands of families had recently fled
Hit to Al-Baghdadi, a town to the northwest, and other locations in
Anbar where displaced civilians are gathered.
"At least 120 families arrived in Al-Baghdadi yesterday but there are thousands of families still in there," he told AFP.
He
said most of the civilians had gathered in the Jamaiya and Al-Omal
neighbourhoods near the main market of Hit, a city that lies around 145
kilometres (90 miles) west of Baghdad.
Some IS fighters
fled the town on Sunday and Saturday, including some top foreign
leaders who had been based in Hit, according to several senior security
officials.
"It is clear however that some of them remain, they are mostly deployed in defensive positions around the city," Nimrawi said.
Yahya
Rasool, the spokesman for the Joint Operations Command coordinating the
fight against IS in Iraq, said an operation in Hit would come soon.
"Unfortunately,
Hit is still under Daesh control but it will be retaken in the coming
days," he told AFP, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
Hit
residents had hoped when IS fighters pulled out on Sunday that
government forces and allied tribal fighters would swoop in to seal the
recapture of the city.
But while some IS fighters left, others rotated in and civilians in Hit fear being trapped in the town for the final battle.
"So
far, there are no security forces in Hit, the inhabitants are scared
because they know there will be a big military operation," said Naim
al-Kaoud, the leader of the Nimr tribe.
Over the
weekend, IS fighters also abandoned the town of Rutba - deep in the
Anbar desert - only to move back in 24 hours later, according to
security officials.
They still control the town but
their foreign leaders did not return and are believed to have moved
towards Al-Qaim, a town on the border with Syria.
Iraqi
forces, backed by a US-led coalition, have been battling to regain
ground from IS since the jihadists seized control of large parts of Iraq
and neighbouring Syria in mid-2014.
|
blog archive
Tuesday, 15 March 2016
Civilians flee Iraq town as security forces close in on IS
التسميات:
Middle-East-Online
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment