Thursday, 14 April 2016
Iraqi forces 'recapture IS-held town of Hit'
The military declared that Hit had been "completely
liberated" by units of the elite Counter-Terrorism Service
(CTS).
Since it began in mid-March, the assault on the town has
been the focus of the government's wider campaign to
regain control of Anbar province.
Hit sits on a key supply route linking IS-held territory in Iraq
and Syria.
Iraqi military officials and the US-led coalition against IS
believe that by clearing the town 150km (93 miles) west of
Baghdad, they can build on other recent gains in the vast
desert of Anbar.
'We will never leave'
CTS spokesman Sabah al-Numani told the AFP news agency
that troops took complete control of Hit on Thursday, after
clearing it of the last remaining gunmen.
IS militants in the town, between Ramadi and Haditha, put
up heavy resistance to the assault. Air strikes by coalition
warplanes were being called in by troops late into
Wednesday night, CTS commander Gen Abdul Ghani al-Asadi
told the Associated Press.
Gen Asadi said that in intercepted radio communications IS
fighters were heard saying that "this is our headquarters and
we will never leave this area".
More than 20,000 civilians fled Hit after the launch of the
operation to retake the town last month, but thousands
more were believed to be trapped inside during the last
stages of the battle.
The offensive on Hit was reportedly delayed by a two-week
sit-in protest in Baghdad by supporters of the powerful Shia
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, as forces had to be pulled from
Anbar to protect them.
The protesters demanded that Prime Minister Haider al-
Abadi move ahead with a plan to replace ministers
appointed on the basis of political affiliation with
technocrats in a bid to tackle systemic political patronage
that has aided corruption.
At the end of March, Mr Abadi submitted a list of non-
partisan nominees, but it was rejected by the main parties,
who put forward their own candidates,
Mr Abadi submitted a second list with their approval on
Tuesday, triggering a sit-in in parliament by dozens of MPs,
who demanded an opportunity to vote on the original list.
There were chaotic scenes on Wednesday as a brawl broke
out during a debate over the reshuffle, and the speaker
Salim al-Jabouri formally called for parliament to be
dissolved.
On Thursday, a number of MPs held a vote of no-confidence
in Mr Jabouri, a leading Sunni Arab politician and ally of the
prime minister. But Mr Jabouri said the session lacked the
necessary quorum and was marred by "many legal and
constitutional errors".
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