Kirkuk: Iraqi forces launched an operation on Tuesday to retake the town of Sherqat from Daesh which has controlled it for more than two years, military sources said.

The town lies on the west bank of the Tigris river 260 kilometres northwest of Baghdad and around 80 kilometres south of Mosul, the terrorist’ last major bastion in Iraq.

Iraqi forces have already reconquered other towns north of Sherqat on the way to Mosul but the question of Shiite militia involvement in military operations there had held up the push.

“The operation to liberate Sherqat started at 5.30am from several directions ... with the support of coalition forces,” Joint Operations Command spokesman Yahya Rasool said.

“We are making good progress,” he said. “Sherqat is important, we can’t move on Mosul and have terrorists control Sherqat.”

Sherqat lies in the far north of Salaheddin province, which includes the cities of Samarra and Tikrit, and close to the border with Nineveh province of which Mosul is the capital.

Ahmad Al Assadi, the spokesman of the Hashed Al Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation) paramilitary force, also announced the operation.

“The sons of Hashed Al Shaabi and the Iraqi army backed by the air force launched the ‘Sherqat Dawn’ operation to finish expelling those terrorist gangsters from usurped Iraqi land,” he said.

The Hashed Al Shaabi, which has played a big part in retaking Daesh-held areas since 2014, is nominally under the control of the prime minister but dominated by Tehran-backed Shiite militia.

It also includes less powerful Sunni tribal forces supporting the government against Daesh.

Rasool stressed that only tribal forces — sometimes referred to as Hashed Al Ashaeri (Tribal Mobilisation) — were fighting in Sherqat, not Shiite militias.

Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi, speaking from New York after a meeting with US President Barack Obama, said the same operation also included efforts to flush out Daesh fighters from desert areas near Ramadi and Hit in the western province of Al Anbar.