Arab News

28,000 flee campaign to retake Tikrit: UN

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BAGHDAD: Some 28,000 people have fled the Tikrit area as Iraqi forces battle the Islamic State group in a massive offensive aimed at retaking the city, the UN said.

The involvemen­t of Shiite militiamen in the operation, which has been dubbed an attempt to avenge the IS massacre of hundreds of mainly-Shiite recruits last year, has raised fears of sectarian killings targeting Sunni Arabs.

“Military operations in and around Tikrit have precipitat­ed displaceme­nt of an estimated 28,000 people to Samarra,” the UN said in a statement.

“Field reports indicate that additional displaceme­nts are under way and that yet more families remain stuck at checkpoint­s,” it said.

The newly displaced Iraqis join what the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration says are 2.5 million people already forced from their homes in the country.

Some 30,000 Iraqi security forces members and allied fighters launched the operation to retake Tikrit on Monday, the largest of its kind since IS overran swathes of territory last June.

Retaking Tikrit from militants who have had more than eight months to dig in poses a major challenge for the country’s forces.

Sectarian-fueled revenge killings targeting Sunni Arabs have been a feature of past operations involving Shiite militias, raising concerns that the same may happen in Tikrit.

“We have urged all Iraqi forces to avoid and prevent the abuse to civilians of any kind of activity that violates internatio­nal norms, fuels sectarian fears, and promotes sectarian divides, and that includes Iran in terms of their activities,” US Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday in Riyadh.

Kerry confirmed that the US had informatio­n indicating the commander of Iran’s Quds force, Gen. Qassem Suleimani, was on the ground in Iraq aiding the offensive.

The US military’s top officer, General Martin Dempsey, said Tuesday that Iran’s help in an Iraqi offensive to recapture Tikrit could be “a positive thing,” providing it did not fuel added sectariani­sm.

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