IS conflict: Iraq army makes advances on Tal Afar

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The Iraqi army says it has taken a number of villages on the outskirts of Tal Afar, one of the last urban strongholds held by so-called Islamic State (IS) in the country.

A major offensive to retake the northern city was launched on Sunday.
Meanwhile, the UN has warned that thousands fleeing the area are at risk, trekking for hours in extreme heat.
After the fall of Mosul in July, Tal Afar is the last major population centre under IS control in the north.
The mainly Shia Muslim city, which fell to IS in 2014, has strategic significance as it sits on what was once a major jihadist supply route between Mosul and the Syrian border.
Lt Gen Abdul Amir Rashid Yarallah, who is leading the Tal Afar operation, said the army had “liberated” five villages to the east of the city, while counter-terrorism forces advanced through two villages in the south west.
Shia militiamen form the paramilitary Popular Mobilisation (Hashd al-Shaabi) force helped to regain control of another village in the east, as well as the southern part of the Zambar mountain range and two villages to the north west of Tal Afar.
The commander of the Iraqi Federal Police, Lt Gen Raed Jawdat, said his forces, backed by PM fighters, had taken another two villages and killed 20 IS militants.
The PM, which did not play a big part in retaking the mainly Sunni city of Mosul, has taken a far more active role in Tal Afar.
Government forces on the ground, as well as Kurdish Peshmerga to the north of the city, are being aided by dozens of US-led coalition air strikes.
Meanwhile, IS said via its Amaq news agency that it had killed 114 Iraqi troops and members of “an allied militia” on the first day of fighting.
It said some 40 vehicles, including two tanks, belonging to “enemy forces” had been destroyed in three suicide attacks.

‘Food and water running out’

The UN’s humanitarian co-ordinator for Iraq, Lise Grande, warned on Sunday that thousands of civilians fleeing for safety faced extreme conditions, with reports of tough conditions inside the city.
“Families are trekking for 10 to 20 hours in extreme heat to reach mustering points. They are arriving exhausted and dehydrated.”
Ms Grande said more than 30,000 people had already fled the district, and the UN was preparing for the arrival of thousands more in the coming days and weeks.
On conditions inside the city, she said: “Food and water are running out, and people lack the basic necessities to survive.”
Anti-IS coalition forces estimate that between 50,000 and 100,000 civilians remain in and around the city.
The Iraqi air force dropped leaflets over the city warning people to “prepare” for the latest assault.

Warning to jihadists

Announcing the new military offensive on Sunday, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said the jihadists had the choice between “surrender or die”.
A senior Iraqi commander, who was once mayor of Tal Afar, estimates there to be between 1,500 and 2,000 militants and their family members left in the city.
Maj-Gen Najm al-Jabouri told Reuters news agency the jihadists were “worn out and demoralised” and that he did not expect a fierce battle for the town like the one for Mosul, which lasted almost nine months and took a heavy toll on Iraqi forces.
Beside Tal Afar, IS controls territory around Hawija, 170km (105 miles) to the south-east; and from Ana to Al-Qaim in the Euphrates river valley, 220km to the south.

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