UN: More Than 80,000 Iraqi Civilians Flee Fallujah Amid Clashes

UN: More Than 80,000 Iraqi Civilians Flee Fallujah Amid Clashes
Iraqi forces vehicles drive past damaged buildings in Fallujah's southern Hayakel neighborhood during an operation to retake areas from the Islamic State on June 16, 2016. Jean Marc Mojon/AFP/Getty Images
The Associated Press
Updated:

BAGHDAD—Thousands of civilians are fleeing Fallujah after the city was declared liberated from the Islamic State (ISIS), the United Nations said, while an Iraqi commander reported fierce clashes as elite counterterrorism forces pushed to clear out the remaining militants.

ISIS fighters launched missiles, detonated a suicide car bomb and deployed snipers against Iraqi forces, Brig. Gen. Haider al-Obeidi said. “Iraqi forces are still advancing despite the strong clashes,” he said.

Over the past three days, the U.N. says that nearly ten thousand families have fled Fallujah amid the heavy fighting. More than 80,000 civilians have fled Fallujah and its surrounding areas since the operation to retake the city from ISIS was announced last month, according to the U.N.

“Agencies are scrambling to respond to the rapidly evolving situation and we are bracing ourselves for another large exodus in the next few days as we estimate that thousands more people remain trapped in Fallujah,” said Bruno Geddo, the representative for the U.N.’s refugee agency in Iraq, in a statement Sunday.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory for Iraq on Friday after special forces recaptured most of the city after weeks of fighting. This leaves Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, as the only remaining urban stronghold for ISIS militants in the country.

The Norwegian Refugee Council says the civilian exodus has overwhelmed camps run by the Iraqi government and humanitarian groups, leaving thousands without shelter or proper sanitation.

“Right now as we speak there are thousands without any tents, without any shelter, they have slept overnight out in the open,” said Karl Schembri with the Norwegian Refugee Council, an international humanitarian organization that does extensive work in Anbar province, which surrounds Fallujah. Schembri said the humanitarian situation in Anbar province following the Fallujah operation is potentially “catastrophic.”

The conflict that erupted in Iraq after ISIS blitzed across the country in the summer of 2014 has forced more than 3.4 million people to flee their homes.