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ATTENTION EDITORS - VISUAL COVERAGE OF SCENES OF INJURY OR DEATH Kurdish peshmerga forces look at the dead remains of suicide bombers on the outskirts of Kirkuk, Iraq, March 12, 2016. At least one Kurdish peshmerga fighter was killed and six were wounded when a group of six Islamic State suicide bombers tried to approach a gathering of the peshmerga fighters, and then blew up themselves up, police sources said. REUTERS/Ako Rasheed TEMPLATE OUT Image Credit: REUTERS

Baghdad: Kurdish Peshmerga forces, an Iran-backed Shi’ite militia and Iraq’s army will launch an offensive soon to push Daesh terrorists away from the northern oil region of Kirkuk, a state newspaper reported on Wednesday.

The operation would bring the combined forces closer to Mosul, the largest Iraqi city still held by Daesh, which also controls parts of neighbouring Syria.

The commander of the Shiite Badr Organisation, Hadi Al Amiri, met the Kurdish Regional Government’s interior minister, Karim Sinjari, and officials from Iraq’s defence ministry in Kirkuk on Tuesday, Al Sabah newspaper said.

They agreed plans to take back territory stretching from Kirkuk and Baiji, to Al Shirqat, it said.

The oil city of Kirkuk is under Peshmerga control while Baiji, which has an oil refinery, is held by the Badr Organisation, the largest component of the Popular Mobilisation Forces coalition that assembled in 2014 to fight Daesh.

Al Shirqat is about 100 km south of Mosul, 100 km west of Kirkuk and 60 km north of Baiji.

Meanwhile, Daesh is retrenching as Iraqi forces build up for an operation to retake the northern city of Mosul and some local militants desert the group, the commander in charge of the highly anticipated offensive said.

Thousands of Iraqi troops have deployed to the north with heavy weapons in recent weeks, setting up base alongside US forces and troops from Iraq’s Kurdish autonomous region in Makhmour -- a launchpad around 60 kilometres south of Mosul.

Although he described Daesh as depleted, Nineveh Operations Commander Major General Najm Al Jubbouri said jockeying between the various forces preparing to take part in the battle for Mosul benefited the militants.

“The operation to liberate Nineveh will be done in stages,” Al Jubbouri said, referring to the province of which Mosul is capital. “Now we are more or less just waiting for the order of the commander in chief to begin the first step.” Mosul, home to around two million people before it fell to Daesh during a lightning offensive in 2014, is by far the biggest city ruled by the terror group in either Iraq or Syria. An Iraqi offensive to recapture it, backed by air strikes and advisors from a US-led coalition, would be the biggest counterattack ever mounted against the group.

Kurdish and Iraqi military sources say the initial move will be westwards from Makhmour to the town of Qayyara on the Tigris River, which would sever Daesh’s main artery between Mosul and territory it controls further south and east.

Jubbouri said the timing would hinge on the progress of military operations in the valley of Iraq’s other great river, the Euphrates, where Iraqi forces have been advancing against the militants after routing them from a provincial capital, Ramadi, in December.

The US-led coalition bombing Daesh hopes Mosul will be recaptured this year, dealing a decisive blow to the militant group. But many question whether the Iraqi army, which partially collapsed when the militants overran a third of the country in June 2014, will be ready in time.

As Iraqi forces push up towards Mosul, Jubbouri said he did not expect to encounter much resistance because people in the villages south of the city were fed up with the militants and are likely to rise up against them.

Already, Daesh has withdrawn from certain villages, he said: “They have begun to abandon some areas and concentrate their presence near Mosul because they know there is no way for them.” Citing intelligence, Jubbouri said there were 6,000-8,000 militants in Nineveh province, of which the majority were local Iraqis motivated less by belief in Daesh’s ultra-hardline creed than the material benefits of siding with the militants.

“For that reason, many have begun to leave the organisation and the battlefield. We know the foreign fighters are the ones who will fight fiercely, and also the Iraqis whose hands are stained with the blood of other Iraqis.” In Mosul itself, Jubbouri expected street fighting and said the main challenge was the presence of more than one million people who would be used as human shields by the militants.

When Daesh conquered Mosul, many residents welcomed them as liberators from a heavy-handed army, but Jubbouri estimated that between 70-75 per cent of the population would now support the security forces.

“The rest are either hesitant or scared, and a part are embroiled (with Daesh) in a big way.” Rivalry between different factions who want to take part in the offensive and secure influence in Mosul poses another challenge, Jubbouri said.

The involvement of Shiite militias is a subject of controversy because they have been accused of abuses against Sunnis in other areas recaptured from the militants.

Turkey has also deployed troops to a base north of Mosul where they are training a militia formed by the former governor of the province, while Kurdish security forces known as peshmerga will play a support role.

“What is necessary is for all efforts now to be combined,” Jubbouri said. “We must put aside our egos and differences and keep our eyes on the goal: to liberate the city.”