Iraq Launches Offensive on Last ISIS Bastion in Border Region

File photo: Iraqi forces seen in Anbar province.(AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)
File photo: Iraqi forces seen in Anbar province.(AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)
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Iraq Launches Offensive on Last ISIS Bastion in Border Region

File photo: Iraqi forces seen in Anbar province.(AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)
File photo: Iraqi forces seen in Anbar province.(AFP Photo/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE)

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi announced early on Thursday an operation to recapture the western border region of al-Qaim and Rawa, close to the Syrian border, from ISIS.

Al-Qaim and Rawa are the last patch of Iraqi territory still in the hands of the terrorist organization.

The extremist group also holds parts of the Syrian side of the border but the area under its control is shrinking as the militants retreat in the face of two sets of hostile forces – a US-backed, Kurdish-led coalition and Syrian regime troops with foreign militias backed by Iran and Russia.

In 2014, the group seized nearly a third of Iraq in a lightning sweep. Since then government troops and paramilitary forces have driven the militants from more than 90 percent of their territory.

ISIS’ self-declared cross-border “caliphate” effectively collapsed in July, when US-backed Iraqi forces captured Mosul, the group’s de facto capital in Iraq, in a gruelling battle that lasted nine months.

Raqqa, the terrorist group’s stronghold in Syria, fell to US-backed forces last week.

Meanwhile, Kurdish authorities Thursday accused Iraqi forces of launching an offensive against their fighters near the border with Turkey.

"As of 0600hrs Iraqi forces and Iranian-backed PMF (Popular Mobilization Forces) are shelling Peshmerga positions from Zummar front, northwest Mosul, using heavy artillery. They are advancing towards Peshmerga positions," the top defense body of the autonomous region's government said in a statement.



WHO Sends Over 1 Mln Polio Vaccines to Gaza to Protect Children 

Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, look out from a window as they take shelter, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2024. (Reuters)
Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, look out from a window as they take shelter, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2024. (Reuters)
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WHO Sends Over 1 Mln Polio Vaccines to Gaza to Protect Children 

Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, look out from a window as they take shelter, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2024. (Reuters)
Displaced Palestinians, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, look out from a window as they take shelter, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, July 24, 2024. (Reuters)

The World Health Organization is sending more than one million polio vaccines to Gaza to be administered over the coming weeks to prevent children being infected after the virus was detected in sewage samples, its chief said on Friday.

"While no cases of polio have been recorded yet, without immediate action, it is just a matter of time before it reaches the thousands of children who have been left unprotected," Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in an opinion piece in Britain's The Guardian newspaper.

He wrote that children under five were most at risk from the viral disease, and especially infants under two since normal vaccination campaigns have been disrupted by more than nine months of conflict.

Poliomyelitis, which is spread mainly through the fecal-oral route, is a highly infectious virus that can invade the nervous system and cause paralysis. Cases of polio have declined by 99% worldwide since 1988 thanks to mass vaccination campaigns and efforts continue to eradicate it completely.

Israel's military said on Sunday it would start offering the polio vaccine to soldiers serving in the Gaza Strip after remnants of the virus were found in test samples in the enclave.

Besides polio, the UN reported last week a widespread increase in cases of Hepatitis A, dysentery and gastroenteritis as sanitary conditions deteriorate in Gaza, with sewage spilling into the streets near some camps for displaced people.