BAGHDAD, July 5 (Reuters) - Iraqi Shi'ite fighters and army troops
made gains north of Falluja on Sunday but their efforts to seal off
Islamic State militants in the city met heavy resistance, including
suicide bomb attacks, army sources and militia fighters said.
Prime
Minister Haider al-Abadi's government is trying to reverse recent gains
by Islamic State hardliners in the western province of Anbar after they
seized the provincial capital Ramadi in May.
Falluja, just 40 km
(25 miles) west of Baghdad, was a center of Sunni Muslim armed
opposition to the Shi'ite-led government even before Islamic State took
control of most of Iraq's Sunni regions in June last year.
Sunday's offensive was led by fighters from Kata'ib Hezbollah, part
of the mainly Shi'ite Hashd Shaabi force fighting with the army against
Islamic State.
Spokesman Jaafar Hussaini said the group managed to
cut off a supply line to Islamic State-held territory north of the
city. Authorities say they already control the eastern, southern and
western approaches.
"Today's advance is a key achievement to
isolate Daesh terrorists inside the city and cut all their supply
lines," Hussaini said, referring to Islamic State. "Today's advance will
determine how and when Falluja liberation operations start."
Two
army sources said Islamic State fighters deployed at least two suicide
car bombs to break the advance, killing 21 members of the Hashd Shaabi
and army force, but failed to stop them capturing a bridge at al-Sheeha,
north of the city.
They said Islamic State forces pulled back to
the nearby area of Albu Shijil, where they came under heavy bombardment
from army artillery.
Iraqi forces are being supported in Anbar by a
U.S.-led coalition which has been carrying out air strikes for nearly a
year against Islamic State in its self-declared caliphate across parts
of Iraq and Syria.
In Iraq, the Islamist militants have been
pushed out of the city of Tikrit and eastern province of Diyala, but are
still fighting in the town of Baiji, home to Iraq's largest oil
refinery. In Syria they have lost ground to Kurdish fighters, but
captured the central town of Palmyra in May.
In the Iraqi capital
Baghdad at least 12 people were killed in four separate bombings. Two
bombs struck on Sunday morning, and the second pair exploded after dusk
as people were breaking their daily Ramadan fasts.
There was no
immediate claim of responsibility for the attacks, but statements issued
in the name of Islamic State on Sunday said it was behind two bombs
which killed 10 people the day before.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/07/05/isis-falluja_n_7731760.html
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