Iraq’s army has secured the first “relatively safe” exit route for civilians attempting to flee the city of Fallujah amid operations by the government forces to retake key areas from the DaeshTakfiri terrorists.
According to Brigadier General Yahya Rasool, who is the spokesman for the Joint Military Command, an exit route, known as al-Salam (Peace) Junction, was secured southwest of the city.
“There were exit routes previously, but this is the first to be completely secure and it’s relatively safe,” media outlets quoted Rasool as saying on Sunday.
Iraqi forces have been engaged in a major offensive to free Fallujah, located in the western province of Anbar. The large-scale push for the liberation of the city started on May 23.
Latest reports indicate that the forces have recently pushed back the terrorists from the strategic areas of Subeihat and Falahat, west of the city.
Thousands of civilians have been forced from their homes in Fallujah, while many more still remain trapped.
4,000 flee Fallujah using army’s safe corridor
According to a Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) said on Sunday, 4,000 Fallujah residents have fled the city in 24 hours using Iraqi army’s safe corridor, AFP reported.
“The army opened a safe corridor for families fleeing from Fallujah through al-Salam intersection,” an officer with the Joint Operations Command, which supervises the fight against Daesh, said.
Residents of Fallujah have been taking huge risks to flee the city, walking along mined roads and trying to cross the Euphrates River at any cost.
“The latest figure we have is that 4,000 individuals have managed to get out over the past 24 hours,” the NRC’s regional media adviser Karl Schembri said.
“We are of course relieved, but it also means we are completely overwhelmed as a humanitarian community,” he added, warning that the available resources of safe drinking water would not meet the needs of all the displaced for much longer.
Schembri stated that the general aid effort in Iraq was massively underfunded, hampering the delivery of urgent relief.
In the short term, he said, the response to the Fallujah operation would require USD 10 million (8.9 million euros) over the next six months if another 35,000 people were displaced.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi recently announced that the offensive to liberate Fallujah has been slowed down due to fears for the safety of civilians being used as human shield. He also said safe corridors have been established to allow some civilians to exit.
Iraqi troops gain ground from Daesh in Mosul march
Meanwhile, Iraqi troops have managed to retake a village south of the Daesh-held city of Mosul as their liberation operations continue in the area.
The Nineveh Operations Command said in a Sunday statement that government forces, equipped with tanks and armored vehicles, recaptured the village of KharaibJabr on the western bank of Tigris River.
The village rests near the southern outskirts of Mosul, which has served as the main stronghold of Daesh terrorists in Iraq since 2014.
The troops also killed at least 25 terrorists during fierce clashes with them and destroyed four of their explosives-rigged vehicles.
According to some military officials involved in the operation, the army forces are already advancing towards the village of Haj Ali, about 60 kilometers (40 miles) south of Mosul.
Daesh positions in the village have also come under airstrikes and artillery fire. Reports say at least two Daesh workshops dedicated to make bomb-rigged cars in the village were destroyed during the attacks.
Fighters from the Iraq’s Popular Mobilization units and Kurdish forces are also involved in the liberation operations carried out in the embattled Nineveh Province.
Iraqi forces are also pressing ahead with a major offensive to free Fallujah in the western province of Anbar.
Daesh overran Fallujah in January 2014, six months before the terror group proceeded with its offensive, taking more areas in Iraq.
Reports say Iraqi forces have recently managed to force back the terrorists from the strategic Subeihat and Falahat areas west of the city.
On May 23, the Iraqi military started a large-scale push to drive out militants from Fallujah, located nearly 70 kilometers west of the capital, Baghdad.
Thousands of civilians have fled their homes out of fear for their lives but tens of thousands remain trapped there. Aid groups and locals say Daesh terrorists use Fallujah residents as human shields to slow down army advances.
The northern and western parts of Iraq have been plagued by gruesome violence ever since Daesh terrorists mounted an offensive in the country in June 2014.
The Iraqi army together with fighters from the Popular Mobilization units has been engaged in operations to liberate militant-held regions.
PRESS T.V
R.S