• Breaking News

    Saturday, January 11, 2014

    UN Council backs Iraq government against militants



    United Nations: The UN Security Council on Friday gave strong backing
    to an Iraqi government campaign to retake provincial strongholds from
    al Qaeda-linked militants.




    The 15-nation council agreed a statement backing Prime Minister Nuri
    al-Maliki amid mounting concern over the battle for Anbar province,
    which runs from the western suburbs of Baghdad up to the border with
    Syria.




    The council condemned attacks by militants of the Islamic State of
    Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and praised the “great courage” of the Iraqi
    security forces in Anbar.




    “The Security Council expresses its strong support for the continued
    efforts of the Iraqi government to help meet the security needs of the
    entire population of Iraq,” said the statement.




    The council urged “Iraqi tribes, local leaders, and Iraqi security
    forces in Anbar province, to continue, expand and strengthen their
    cooperation against violence and terror and it stresses the critical
    importance of continued national dialogue and unity.”




    Gunmen seized Fallujah, just west of Baghdad, and parts of the Anbar
    provincial capital Ramadi last week, the first time militants have had
    such power in major cities since the insurgency following the 2003
    US-led invasion.




    Tribal fighters and police retook two areas of Ramadi on Friday as part of a fightback.



    While rights groups have highlighted the impact on the longer
    suffering population of the province, the United States has increased
    pressure on Maliki's government to focus on political reconciliation, as
    well as the military operations, to end the standoff, which comes three
    months from a key national election

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