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IRAQ WARS
Mosul easier prospect than Raqa for coalition forces: spokesman
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) April 7, 2016


HRW calls for aid to Iraq's 'starving' Fallujah
Baghdad (AFP) April 7, 2016 - Human Rights Watch called Thursday for Iraq to allow aid to reach starving residents of the city of Fallujah, and for the Islamic State group to allow civilians to leave.

"The people of Fallujah are besieged by the government, trapped by (IS), and are starving," HRW's deputy Middle East director, Joe Stork, said in a statement.

"The warring parties should make sure that aid reaches the civilian population."

HRW cited Iraqi activists who are in contact with Fallujah residents as saying that people "were reduced to eating flat bread made with flour from ground date seeds and soups made from grass."

Anti-government fighters took control of Fallujah, just 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, in early 2014 during unrest that broke out after security forces demolished a protest camp farther west, and it later became an IS stronghold.

IS seized more territory in surrounding Anbar province after launching an offensive later that year, but pro-government forces have since regained significant ground from the jihadists.

Iraqi forces have largely cut off access to Fallujah, while IS is preventing residents from leaving the city.

Tribesmen battled IS in Fallujah for several days in February in a sign that its grip was weakening, but the fighting ended after the jihadists detained dozens of residents.

IS has also announced the execution of alleged "spies" in the city.

The US-led coalition fighting Islamic State (IS) group jihadists in Iraq and Syria is better prepared to retake the Iraqi city Mosul than Syria's Raqa, a US military spokesman said Thursday.

Iraq's second city Mosul and Raqa, the IS group's de facto Syrian capital, are the coalition's top objectives.

"The plan to liberate Raqa is not as developed as the plan to liberate Mosul," coalition spokesman Colonel Steve Warren said during a video news conference broadcast from Baghdad.

The coalition can rely on the Iraqi Army to help conduct operations in Mosul, he added. "In Syria, we don't have that."

IS group fighters seized Mosul in June 2014 as they overran vast regions in northern and north-central Iraq, as well as in Syria.

The city holds special significance for the Islamic State group as the location where its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi proclaimed his "caliphate" straddling Iraq and Syria.

In Syria, the coalition has only a small number of advisers on the ground working with the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), "essentially an irregular army" dominated by Kurdish militias, Warren said.

"(We) work with the leadership we have identified within the SDF to try develop a plan" to retake Raqa, he said. "That's ongoing, it's in the early stages, it's a continuing process."

The SDF numbers in the "tens of thousands," although that figure fluctuates, Warren added, saying the group includes around 5,000 Arab fighters.

The IS group has experienced setbacks on several fronts in Syria in recent weeks, including the ancient city of Palmyra, which the Russian-backed Syrian military retook late last month.

The jihadists also recently lost their main crossing point into Turkey, the town of al-Rai in Aleppo province, to factions fighting under the banner of the Free Syrian Army, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The town is one of at least 18 in Aleppo the IS group has lost after holding them for two years.


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