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Iraqi forces edge into Fallujah — US

By AFP - Jun 16,2016 - Last updated at Jun 16,2016

WASHINGTON — Iraqi security forces have entered Fallujah as they continue their battle to wrest the besieged city from the Daesh terror group, the Pentagon said Wednesday.

Baghdad-based military spokesman Colonel Chris Garver said Iraqi counterterrorism fighters, commandos and federal police units are now inside the city's southern edge, but stressed that progress remains slow.

"They have a foothold in the southern corner or the southern edge of the city. But it's been a significant fight to grab that foothold, and so they're continuing to try to expand," he said in a video call with Pentagon reporters.
Fallujah is a medium-sized, densely developed town that lies only 50 kilometres west of Baghdad. 

Along with Mosul, it is one of the last two major Iraqi cities still under Daesh control.
Iraqi security forces, supported by US-led coalition air strikes and advisers, have been fighting to retake the city for more than three weeks.

The Fallujah fight remains slow and difficult, with the "hundreds" of remaining extremists putting up stiff resistance using machine guns, shelling and homemade bombs, Garver said. 

“It’s a tough fight and it gets tougher the closer you get into the city, the harder it gets,” he said. 

“The distances that they move on a daily basis, the closer they get in, they get smaller and the metres that you gain become tougher to gain, they become more significant as we get them.”

Daesh’s systematic use of civilians for human shields has helped hamper progress against the massively outnumbered jihadists.

Daesh militants have killed dozens of civilians as they tried to flee Fallujah despite the Iraqi army’s creation of an evacuation corridor for residents.

The battle for Fallujah has also seen allegations of human rights abuses perpetrated by Iraqi forces against fleeing men. 

 

“For the most part,” however, people are being treated with respect, Garver said.

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