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Iraqi forces take position during clashes with jihadists from the Islamic State group in the eastern suburbs of Ramadi, the capital of Iraq's Anbar province, 120 kilometers west of Baghdad, on Monday. Image Credit: AFP

Baghdad: A senior Iraqi official has appealed to the US-led coalition to air-drop food and medicine to tens of thousands of civilians trapped in Fallujah, the Daesh stronghold under siege by security forces.

The city’s population is suffering from a shortage of food, medicine and fuel, according to residents reached by phone, and local media said several people had died due to starvation and insufficient medical care. Insecurity and poor communications inside the city make those reports difficult to verify.

Sohaib Al Rawi, the governor of western Anbar province where Fallujah is located, said an air-drop was the only way to deliver humanitarian supplies to residents after Daesh mined the entrances to the city and prevented civilians from leaving.

“No force can enter and secure (the delivery)... There is no option but for airplanes to transport aid,” he said in an interview to Al Hadath TV late on Monday, adding the situation was deteriorating by the day.

Fallujah, a long-time bastion of militants located 50km west of Baghdad, was the first Iraqi city to fall to Daesh in January 2014, six months before the group that emerged from Al Qaida swept through large parts of northern and western Iraq and neighbouring Syria.

The Iraqi army, police and Iranian-backed militias have together imposed a near total siege on Fallujah since late last year.

After recapturing the city of Ramadi - a further 50 km to the west - from Daesh a month ago, Iraqi authorities have not made clear whether they will attempt to take Fallujah next or leave it contained while the bulk of their forces head north towards Mosul, the largest city under the militants’ control.

The US-led coalition estimates there are around 400 Daesh fighters in Fallujah, though some military analysts put the figure closer to 1,000. The coalition, which includes European and Arab powers, has not previously committed significant resources to humanitarian operations.

Rawi said the militants were using civilians as human shields like they did in Ramadi — a tactic that slowed the advance of Iraqi forces.

He said media reports of up to 10 deaths due to starvation and insufficient medical care were accurate, but Iraqi officials could not provide details.

Lise Grande, UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, described conditions in Fallujah as “terrible”.

“We’re incredibly worried about the unconfirmed reports of people dying because of lack of medicine and widespread hunger,” she told Reuters.

The United Nations appealed on Sunday for $861 million (Dh3.1 billion) to help Iraq meet a big funding gap in its 2016 emergency response to the humanitarian crisis caused by the war against Daesh which has left 10 million people in need of urgent aid.