Members of Iraq's elite counter-terrorism service walk amidst debris in the city of Ramadi, the capital of Iraq's Anbar province, about 110 kilometers west of Baghdad, after Iraqi forces recaptured it from ISIS December 29, 2015 (Photo: AFP)
Months of fighting in Ramadi have caused extensive destruction, officials said Wednesday, warning that it was too soon for civilians to return to the Iraqi city after its recapture from Islamist militants.
Iraqi forces declared victory on Sunday night in the Ramadi battle after wresting back control of the city's central government complex from the ISIS group.
Some Islamist fighters have yet to be flushed out, mostly on the eastern edge of the city, and many reconquered areas have yet to be fully cleared of roadside bombs and booby traps.
"There is extensive destruction in the city as a result of terrorist activity and military operations," said Ibrahim al-Osej, a member of the Ramadi district council.
ISIS fighters had laid thousands of explosive devices across Ramadi as part of their defence against an offensive that was launched on December 22 by elite federal forces.
The US-led coalition supporting the Iraqi effort to reclaim the city, which was lost to ISIS in May, has also carried out around 630 air strikes in the Ramadi area since July.
"Preliminary estimates show that more than 3,000 homes have been completely destroyed" in Ramadi, which lies around 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Baghdad, Osej said.
He said that the figure would grow because assessments could not be immediately carried out in some neighbourhoods that had not been cleared of mines.
"Thousands of other homes have suffered varying degrees of damage," Osej said.
"All water, electricity, sewage and other infrastructure -- such as bridges, government facilities, hospitals and schools -- have suffered some degree of damage," he said.
In the centre of Ramadi, which lies on the Euphrates river, "there are five bridges in various states of destruction," US operations officer Major Michael Filanowski said Wednesday.
"For all of them at least the span has dropped," he said, adding that he estimated it would take at least weeks to repair them.
Civilians began fleeing Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, two years ago when tensions escalated there, and the exodus has continued until this week.
A few hundred families who had remained holed up in their homes during the fighting were evacuated by the army on Tuesday and taken to a facility in Habbaniyah, east of Ramadi.
The residents of Anbar account for more than a third of the 3.2 million people who have been displaced by conflict in Iraq since the start of 2014, according to the International Organization for Migration.
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