Iraq has launched a military
operation to recapture Tikrit, the hometown of former leader Saddam
Hussein, from Islamic State (IS) and its allies.
Troops and militia were said to be attacking on different fronts, backed by air strikes from Iraqi fighter jets.
The government says that its forces are advancing into the city but this has not been confirmed.
A Shia militia commander has told the BBC that Iran's Gen Qasem Soleimani is also taking part in the operation.
'Last chance'
Gen Soleimani is the commander of the Revolutionary Guards' overseas operation arm, the Quds Force.
He
emerged from decades in the shadows after the IS advance in Iraq last
summer, personally overseeing the defence of the capital Baghdad and
mobilising pro-Iranian Shia militia - by organising them as well as
funnelling money and weapons to them.
Tikrit lies 150km (95 miles) north of the capital Baghdad. It was
seized in June 2014 by IS militants backed by anti-government Sunni
allies loyal to Saddam Hussein's banned Baath party.
A commander
of a Shia militia unit involved in the offensive told BBC Persian that
IS have announced that they have taken a number of youths hostage and
have threatened to kill them if government forces enter the city.
He added that the Iranians had been involved in the Tikrit operation for the past two days.
Major offensive
Gen Soleimani has been pictured visiting the front lines north of the capital on several occasions.
Tehran says it has only sent troops to advise Iraqi security forces' personnel, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and Shia militiamen.
However,
members of the Guards and the Quds Force are widely believed to be
involved in combat operations, including those that have benefited from
US-led coalition air strikes.
On Monday, Al-Iraqiya TV said that IS militants had been dislodged from some areas of Salahuddin province, outside Tikrit.
It
added that Iraqi troops and fighters from the Popular Mobilisation
Forces - an umbrella group of Shia militia fighting IS - were moving
into Tikrit as air strikes hit northern militant strongholds.
Government
forces say they are 5km away from the heart of the city, the BBC's
Ahmed Maher reports in Baghdad, but this has not been confirmed by
independent sources.
Our correspondent says that 4,500 militiamen are reported to be taking part in the offensive.
Shia militia have done much of the fighting against IS militants but have also been accused of killing scores of Sunni civilians in apparent revenge attacks.
Analysis: Ahmed Maher, BBC News, Baghdad
The
operation involving up to 20,000 government troops is being backed by
an alliance of volunteers mainly from the Shia community but also Sunni
tribal fighters.
The Popular Mobilisation Force was formed last summer following the
collapse of army troops after IS militants swept through the Sunni
heartlands in the north and west of Iraq.
The jihadist movement is
backed by Sunni insurgents, who started to take up arms against the
Shia-led government in late 2013 after months of protests against what
the Sunni community perceived as marginalisation and discrimination.
Several governments have attempted to reclaim Tikrit, the capital city of Salahuddin province, but have failed since July 2014.
The
city is also symbolic for being the birthplace of Saddam Hussein. US
forces found the former president hiding in southern Tikrit eight months
after the US-led invasion in 2003.
If the military operation
succeeds, the government forces and their allies will face a much bigger
challenge to retake the main stronghold of IS in the north, the city of
Mosul.
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi met military leaders in Salahuddin province ahead of the advance.
He
declared the start of the operation late on Sunday, as tens of
thousands of troops and militia gathered in the central town of Samarra.
Mr
al-Abadi offered to pardon all Sunni tribal fighters "who have been
misled or committed a mistake to lay down arms" and abandon IS.
He described it as a "last chance", saying that the city of Tikrit would soon be returned to its people.
IS militants hold several areas of Salahuddin, a predominantly Sunni Muslim province.
Tikrit was the second major gain for IS after the group captured the city of Mosul in June last year.
Mosul
was home to more than a million people when it fell to IS after the
militants launched an offensive in northern Iraq that saw it seize large
swathes of the country.
Soldiers and allied Shia militiamen have
now begun to recapture territory from IS north of Baghdad, with the
help of US-led coalition air strikes.
At the same time, Kurdish peshmerga forces have been making advances around Mosul.
In
February, Mr al-Abadi said that Iraqi armed forces would be launching a
major offensive "in a few months' time" to retake the city from IS
militants.
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