Saturday, May 16, 2015

ISIL pulls out from key areas in Iraq's Ramadi

Fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group have withdrawn from the main government building in the Iraqi city of Ramadi, a day after the group raised its black flag over the building in the capital of Anbar province.

The city's mayor and tribal leader said air strikes by the US-led coalition on Saturday forced the armed group to retreat, leaving the buildings booby trapped or on fire, the officials said. Their reports could not be confirmed.

The withdrawal of the fighters comes a day after they seized the heavily fortified complex, the loss of which provincial officials blamed on a lack of support from the Iraqi government.

"For months we were complaining and telling the Security Ministries that there was no coordination," Hikmat Suleiman, the spokesman for Anbar's governor, told Al Jazeera, adding that the military ignored requests for much needed weapons.

A coalition of pro-government Sunni tribesmen and Iraqi security forces are trying to wrestle control of the city, backed by US-led coalition airpower.

The government compound contains Anbar's governor's office, police headquarters and intelligence headquarters.

ISIL itself issued a statement in which it said its fighters "broke into the Safavid government complex in the centre of Ramadi".

The operation "resulted in the control of it after killing the 'murtadeen' then blowing up the adjacent buildings of Anbar's governorate and the Safavid Anbar police HQ."

ISIL has threatened to take control of Ramadi for months and the breakthrough came after a wide offensive on several fronts in the province, including an assault using several suicide car bombs in Ramadi on Thursday.

  Source: Al Jazeera And Reuters
16/5/15
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2 comments:

  1. Hundreds of police, military flee key Iraqi city seized by ISIS...

    Hundreds of police personnel, soldiers and tribal fighters fled Ramadi on Sunday after the Islamic State captured one of the last pro-government holdouts in the Iraqi city, police and tribesmen said.

    The retreat appears to have dealt a blow to efforts announced by Iraqi officials to defend the city, the capital of Anbar province, by sending military reinforcements to fight the advancing extremist group.

    Meanwhile, in a sign of the seriousness of the situation in Ramadi, Anbar’s provincial council voted Sunday in favor of allowing Shiite militias to participate in the battle to retake the city. In the Sunni-dominated province, there is deep suspicion of the Shiite militias, as well as the Shiite-led government in Baghdad. The Islamic State has capitalized on Sunni grievances to take control of most of the province, which is Iraq’s largest.

    “We voted yes to the measure,” said Kahtan Abed, officer manager for the provincial council’s head, Sabah Karhout.

    “We took this decision because we have nowhere else to turn. We’ve literally lost everything.”.....washingtonpost.com
    17/5/15

    ReplyDelete
  2. Chute de Ramadi en Irak: Washington réexamine sa stratégie...

    Les Etats-Unis procèdent à un "réexamen" de leur stratégie en Irak après la chute de Ramadi tombée aux mains du groupe Etat islamique (EI), a admis mercredi un haut responsable américain, promettant que Washington "aiderait" Bagdad à reprendre cette ville "dès que possible"....rtbf.be

    ReplyDelete

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