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Iraq building security wall around Baghdad — military commander

By Reuters - Feb 03,2016 - Last updated at Feb 03,2016

Employees work at strengthening the Mosul Dam in northern Iraq on Wednesday. Iraq said Tuesday that Italian firm Trevi will repair and maintain the country's largest dam, which is in danger of a catastrophic collapse that would devastate areas to the south after a lapse in maintenance when Daesh militants seized it in 2014, according to Agence France-Presse (Reuters photo)

BAGHDAD — Iraqi security forces have begun building a concrete wall surrounding the capital Baghdad in a bid to prevent attacks by Daesh militants, a military statement said on Wednesday.

Daesh, which seized vast swathes of territory north and west of Baghdad, claimed several attacks in recent months in the Iraqi capital. The last one, on January 11, targeted a shopping mall and killed at least 18 people, according to police sources.

The planned security barrier will surround the city from all sides, said Baghdad Operations Command's head Lt. Gen. Abdul Ameer Al Shammari, in a statement published on the defence ministry's website. The preparatory work on the wall started on Monday, he said.

"The security barrier around Baghdad will prevent terrorists from infiltrating the capital or smuggling explosives and car bombs to target innocent civilians," he said.

Construction will start in the area of Al Subaihat, around 30km to the west of Baghdad, so as to isolate it from Falluja, a long-time bastion of extremists now under control of Daesh.

Many districts in the Iraqi capital are now surrounded by concrete fences dating back to the strife that pitted Sunnis and Shiites about a decade ago.

Some of these concrete walls will be dismantled in the districts that are no longer deemed under threat, and used in the new wall around Baghdad, along with surveillance camera and explosives detection devices, Shammari said.

 

The walls and barriers around the so-called Green Zone are expected to remain. Created by the US-led coalition that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003, this heavily fortified zone now houses the government, parliament and many embassies including those of the US and Britain.

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