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Destroyed vehicles from clashes are seen in Falluja, Iraq, after government forces recaptured the city from Islamic State militants. Image Credit: REUTERS

Baghdad: The United Nations said Iraqi authorities will allow civilians displaced by the assault on Daesh-held Fallujah to start returning home as early as August.

More than 85,000 people fled their homes during a month-long campaign that ended on Sunday when Iraqi authorities declared they had completely recaptured the city, an hour’s drive west of Baghdad.

A report on Thursday from the UN refugee agency UNHCR, noting the government’s plans, said the level of destruction will make their return difficult in the short term and explosives would pose a hazard to residents.

The civilians at government-run camps, who make up about a third of Fallujah’s total population before Daesh took over 2-1/2 years ago, are currently relying on handouts from the United Nations and aid groups.

Lack of funding means many do not have adequate shelter, food or water amid temperatures exceeding 50 degrees Celsius. Humanitarian agencies fear poor sanitation could spread infectious diseases like cholera and skin diseases in addition to exacerbating chronic illnesses.

The head of Iraq’s Sunni waqf (endowment), a public institution that manages religious sites, delivered the first Friday sermon since the city’s recapture at a mosque inside Fallujah. A few dozen worshippers, including senior military commanders and tribal shaikhs, were gathered there.

“I can see from liberated Fallujah the gates of Nineveh open to you Iraqis, you fighters; enter them with your rifles as liberators,” Abdul Latif Al Humaim said in a live television broadcast.

Mosul, the capital of Nineveh province in the north and the largest city still controlled by Daesh, is the top target in the government’s campaign against the militants who seized a third of Iraqi territory two years ago.