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IRAQ WARS
Iraq Kurds deliver aid to Mt Sinjar, expand operation
by Staff Writers
Mount Sinjar, Iraq (AFP) Dec 20, 2014


Kurds press Sinjar operation in north Iraq
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Dec 20, 2014 - Iraqi Kurdish and allied forces on Saturday pressed on with a vast operation to wrest back swathes of land from the Islamic State jihadist group.

A day after a months-old siege on Mount Sinjar was broken, Kurdish peshmerga forces launched another offensive from Rabia, on the Syria border, to further clear the area.

"Peshmerga forces launched a new offensive south of Rabia to Mount Sinjar" at 8:00 am (0500 GMT), the Kurdistan Regional Security Council (KRSC) said in a statement.

The KRSC is headed by Masrour Barzani, who is the autonomous Iraqi Kurdish region's intelligence chief and also the son of Kurdish regional president Massud Barzani.

It said peshmerga forces took complete control of a number of villages north of the vast mountain range, a 60-kilometre-long (40 miles) ridge in northwestern Iraq.

Fighters and civilians from the Kurdish Yazidi minority had been trapped atop the mountain since September.

The Kurdish statement said the aim of the operation, which began on Wednesday, was to reconquer territory covering around 2,100 square kilometres (800 square miles).

Barzani has described the operation, in which he said 8,000 peshmerga are involved, as the biggest and most successful so far against IS jihadists.

There are other groups involved in the operation, such as the Syrian Kurdish YPG group which is also leading the battle in the town of Kobane, on Syria's border with Turkey.

Among the other outfits who have had a presence on the mountain or around it are the armed wing of Turkey's Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and a local Yazidi offshoot known as the YBS.

The YPG issued a statement on Friday saying they were moving south and taking villages on the Iraqi border back from IS to connect with PKK and YBS forces moving north.

Their aim is reopen the corridor that saw biblical scenes in August when tens of thousands of Yazidis fled after a first siege of the mountain in August.

The peshmerga also said they were approaching the town of Sinjar, which lies on the southern side of the mountain.

On Friday, local residents reported that peshmerga forces were closing in on Tall Afar, pounding IS positions with artillery and forcing civilians and fighters to flee.

Tall Afar is a large town located between Sinjar and the jihadists' main hub of Mosul. Huge numbers of Shiites and Turkmens had to flee the town in June.

Kurdish peshmerga forces delivered aid on Mount Sinjar and expanded a major offensive against jihadist-held areas in northwestern Iraq on Saturday after breaking a months-old siege.

The peshmerga closed in on Sinjar town south of the mountain and Tal Afar to its east. If successful, the move would significantly alter the map of the Islamic State (IS) group's self-declared cross-border "caliphate" and isolate its Mosul hub.

The autonomous Iraqi Kurdish region's peshmerga troops reached the flanks of Mount Sinjar with food and other aid three days after launching a vast operation in the region backed by US-led coalition air strikes.

As the convoy worked its way up the mountain, a 60-kilometre-long (40-mile) ridge where civilians and fighters had been trapped since September, people swarmed vehicles to get food.

"I haven't seen an orange since September," said a 10-year-old girl as the peshmerga distributed fruit and other food.

The civilians, some of whom had sought refuge on Sinjar after being displaced from nearby villages by IS fighters, looked exhausted, their skin sunburnt and clothes caked in dirt.

"We had barely received any aid in 75 days. It stopped coming when the Islamic State cut the road," said Hassan Khalaf, a gaunt 45-year-old.

"What we need now is aid. We want them to save us," he told an AFP journalist travelling with the peshmerga convoy.

- Genocide fears -

Tens of thousands of members of the Yazidi religious minority were trapped on the mountain for days in the searing August heat in a first siege that sparked fears of genocide and was one of the reasons that led US President Barack Obama to launch an air war against IS.

Many were eventually evacuated when a coalition of Kurdish forces opened a corridor to Syria, and on Saturday the same factions were trying to reopen that route.

A statement from the Kurdish president's son, who also heads the Kurdish Regional Security Council (KRSC), said the peshmerga had cleared villages on the northern side of the mountain.

The Syrian Kurdish YPG group, which has been leading the battle against the jihadists in the town of Kobane on the Syrian-Turkish border, was moving south to join up with the peshmerga.

It said it recaptured several villages from IS on the Iraqi border, which was confirmed by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.

Securing that corridor will make it possible to evacuate some of the civilians on Sinjar to Iraqi Kurdistan via Syria.

The peshmerga are also receiving crucial support from Yazidi tribal fighters.

On Wednesday, the peshmerga launched what they have described as the largest operation yet against the IS since it overran major parts of Iraq in June.

One of the heaviest series of coalition air strikes paved the way for 8,000 peshmerga to advance.

- Peshmerga momentum -

They soon retook several villages and forced many IS fighters to flee west to Syria or east to Mosul, Iraq's second city and the de facto IS capital in the country.

The KRSC said peshmerga forces had used their momentum to move in on Sinjar town on the mountain's southern side.

The peshmerga "succeeded in taking complete control of it and nearby villages," it said on Twitter, although sources on the ground said it was not yet clear that the jihadists had been ousted from the town.

Qassem Shasho, a Yazidi Kurdish commander, said peshmerga forces had reached Sinjar town but have not yet entered as it has to be cleared of militant booby-traps.

On Friday, residents reported that peshmerga forces were closing in on Tal Afar, pounding IS positions and forcing civilians and fighters to flee.

Tal Afar is a large town between Sinjar and Mosul. Large numbers of Shiites and Turkmens had to flee the town in June.

The area between Mosul and the Syria border is considered the heart of IS territory in Iraq. If peshmerga can hold newly retaken ground or make further gains, remaining jihadist positions in and around Mosul will find themselves more isolated.

Some Iraqi political and military leaders have been pushing for swift action to retake Mosul, but US military experts and others have warned that neither the peshmerga nor the federal forces would be ready for some time.

Nevertheless, jihadists in Mosul appear to be digging in, building berms and trenches around the city, cutting the phone network and preventing civilians from leaving.


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IRAQ WARS
Iraq Kurds, coalition jets in major push to retake Sinjar
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Dec 17, 2014
Iraqi Kurdish forces on Wednesday launched a broad offensive backed by mass bombing from US-led coalition warplanes to retake the northeastern Sinjar area from the Islamic State group. In neighbouring Syria, the bodies of 230 people from a tribe that rose up against the jihadists in the Deir Ezzor region have been found in a mass grave, a monitoring group said. Sixty-one air strikes were ... read more


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