San Diego Union-Tribune

THOUSANDS FLEE AFTER CLASHES ERUPT IN IRAQ

-

Thousands of people fled a northern Iraqi town amid clashes between the army and a militia linked to a Kurdish separatist group, the military and Iraqi Kurdish officials said Monday.

At least 3,000 people left Sinjar and its surroundin­g areas, the officials said, and headed farther north toward the semi-autonomous Kurdish region to seek asylum. They left when clashes intensifie­d on Monday between the Iraqi army and the YBS, a militia group with ties to the Turkish insurgent Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.

Many were Yazidis displaced during the 2014 Islamic State onslaught and are bracing for a new round of violence after returning to their homes only a few years ago.

Most of the displaced were distribute­d across camps in the Kurdish region, said Pir Dayan, director of the migration and crisis response department in Dohuk province, in the Kurdish-run region.

The violence erupted when the Iraqi military launched an operation Sunday to clear the area of YBS forces, most of them members from the Yazidi religious minority. By Monday, the fighting spread to other areas in Sinjar district.

In a statement Monday, the Iraqi military said the offensive was to dismantle YBS checkpoint­s erected in Sinjar that have prevented citizens from returning to their homes and undermined Iraqi state authoritie­s. When Iraqi military units confronted YBS forces, the statement said, they were met with heavy fire, snipers and explosives­laden devices on the roads.

The YBS has controlled much of Sinjar since 2014 after driving out IS from the district with assistance from the PKK. Their continued presence in the area has drawn the ire of Turkey, which has been battling the PKK since the 1980s. It has led to regular Turkish military offensives on Iraqi soil to root them out.

In October 2020, Baghdad and the Kurdistan government signed an agreement to jointly manage Sinjar to restore the state’s hold over the patchwork of militia groups and competing authoritie­s in the area after the defeat of IS. But this has proved largely unsuccessf­ul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States