Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. (AFP)
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said it was time to clear al Qaeda-linked militants out of the rebel-held city of Falluja, but set no deadline for any military assault.
The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), an al Qaeda offshoot also on the frontlines of Syria’s civil war, overran Falluja with help from other Sunni Muslim groups on Jan. 1.
Iraqi troops and security forces have set up a loose cordon around the city, 50 km (31 miles) west of Baghdad, and have clashed sporadically with insurgents inside, but Maliki has said community leaders and tribesmen should force ISIL to withdraw, in order to spare Falluja more bloodshed and destruction.
«The time has come to settle this issue and end the presence of this gang in this city and save its people from their evil,» Maliki said in his weekly televised address to the nation.
Three hours later, helicopter gunships bombarded eastern and northern districts of Falluja, residents said. It was not clear if that was the prelude to wider military action. Helicopters have been in action before on the outskirts of the city.
On Tuesday, Iraqi air force strikes killed more than 50 militants of various Arab nationalities and destroyed large amounts of ammunition in the western province of Anbar, a Defence Ministry statement said. It did not say exactly where the raids on «gatherings of terrorist groups» took place.
Maliki again urged the people of Falluja to «to take crucial positions on the presence of those dirty people without losses and without sacrifices,» but set no precise time limit.
«Those criminals are seeking to ignite sectarian strife and to end up with the division of Iraq,» Maliki said.
Maliki faces a parliamentary poll on April 30 with violence in Iraq at its worst since Sunni-Shi’ite killings peaked in 2006-2007.
While people in Falluja are hostile to Maliki’s Shi’ite-led government, many fear a full-scale army attack that would echo two fierce US assaults on insurgents there in 2004. Tens of thousands of people have fled the city, UN officials say.
Efforts to negotiate a solution have so far failed. Tribal chiefs and clerics met on Sunday to pick a new mayor and police chief, but ISIL rejected the outcome because it had not been represented in the talks, participants in the meeting said.
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