Since last night
Fallujah has been the scene of indiscriminate shelling that is still going on,
along with violent clashes on the city's outskirts, particularly in Al-Sichir.
The random shelling has been directed at most of the city's residential
districts. Initial reports indicate that at least 2 residents have been killed
and 8 others have been wounded.
Military operations
are also continuing in and around Al-Garma and Al-Saqlawiya where gunmen are
still in place. Aerial reconnaissance is also continuous and many loud
explosions can be heard in those areas. However, army and security forces have
still not been able to penetrate into Fallujah as of today.
In Ramadi,
intermittent and dispersed clashes are continuing in the city's southern sector
where resistance has been fierce.
There has been a
report of a governorate delegation comprising tribal sheikhs and local
government officials having traveled to Baghdad where they met today with Nouri
Al-Maliki, with the probability of a second meeting tomorrow Wednesday, in an
attempt to find a solution to the Anbar crisis, particularly with regard to
Fallujah. There are numerous indications of agreement on a short or medium-term
ceasefire that would allow civilians to evacuate Fallujah where there have been
many civilian deaths and injuries during the past few days.
More than 1,500
families have migrated from Fallujah to Hit and a further 1,000 families to
Haditha townships in western Anbar where they are facing harsh living
conditions in school buildings. They are in desperate need of the wherewithal
to survive. The local government had ordered payments of 500,000 Dinars
(approx. $430) to every displaced family but these funds are not enough to provide
the needs for most of multi-member families. There are also difficulties in
providing for the ever-increasing numbers of displaced families whose numbers
have reached more than 600,000 people within and outside Anbar governorate who
have been displaced from Fallujah and Ramadi.
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