World

On edge of last Daesh bastion, Iraqis hail end of militant rule

November 03, 2017
Iraqi forces and members of the Hashed Al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilization units) advance toward the city of Al-Qaim, in Iraq's western Anbar province near the Syrian border as they fight against remnant pockets of Daesh (the so-called IS) militants on Friday.  — AFP
Iraqi forces and members of the Hashed Al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilization units) advance toward the city of Al-Qaim, in Iraq's western Anbar province near the Syrian border as they fight against remnant pockets of Daesh (the so-called IS) militants on Friday. — AFP

By Sleimane Al-Kobeissi

FOR Abu Ahmed, the arrival of Iraqi forces in his village on the border with Syria has ended a three-year ordeal at the hands of Daesh (the so-called IS) group that might never have been.

He was only meant to be visiting when he returned to the tiny settlement of Al-Obeidi in western Iraq for his mother's funeral in September 2014.

But two days later the militants swept in, trapping him for years under their brutal rule and far from his home in the capital Baghdad.

That all ended this week when government troops pushing a final offensive against Daesh in Iraq seized Al-Obeidi as they closed in on the largest remaining jihadist-controlled town of Al-Qaim just to the west.

"Thank God, the Iraqi forces have liberated us," he told AFP, refusing to give his real name as "the fear" still remains even though the Daesh fighters might be gone.

After absorbing the village into their self-styled caliphate back in September 2014, the militants "behaved badly toward the people," the man in his 60s said.

In the past few years Iraqi troops have been battling to retake the swathes of territory that Daesh captured when they stormed through the country in 2014.

In brutal fighting Baghdad has ousted IS from one city after another as they systematically dismantled the group's experiment in statehood with the help of air strikes from a US-led coalition.

Now, all that remains of their territory in Iraq is Al-Qaim and the area around in a pocket of barren desert along the Euphrates river near the border with Syria.

Since launching the final offensive to retake the region last week Iraqi troops backed up by local Sunni fighters have captured "over 30 villages and advanced more than 90 km," commander Qassem Al-Mohammedi told AFP.

His men have quickly painted over the Daesh flag that was daubed across an arch at the entrance to Al-Obeidi.

A little further along buildings show the scars of fighting. A row of shops is now only a pile of rubble.

When the fighting started Umm Mohammed thought only of one thing: escaping.

The militants "deprived us of everything. There were people who were ill and died in their homes because they refused to let them be moved," says the woman who also refused to give her full name.

A young girl by her side says she wants to go back to school "now that we are finished with Daesh".

"Without school we forgot everything that we learnt," she said.

Several hundred meters away a sign next to the asphalt road that cuts through the desert points to Al-Qaim 12 km away and Syria further on.

Across the frontier Daesh is also battling for survival as rival offensives backed by the US and Russia eat into its territory.

The Iraqi troops are now focused on Al-Qaim as they look to "force Daesh out" of their country, said general Noman Al-Zoabi, as he advances through the desert with a convoy of armored vehicles.

Ahead of him lie plenty more obstacles: the road is studded with improvised explosive devices set to explode as his forces advance.

And even in the areas that the troops have "liberated" the threat is still ever present.

Behind on the road near Al-Obeidi smouldered the charred carcass of an Iraqi armoured vehicle that had just been blown up by a roadside bomb. — AFP


November 03, 2017
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