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BAGHDAD, Nov. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- US armored vehicles were seen moving toward Fallujah late Sunday, as Iraq's interim government declared a state of emergency for two months. Witnesses said tanks and humvees positioned west of Fallujah, 50 km west of Baghdad, started to move toward the edge of the city, the soldierswere spraying
cannon over the bare field.
US marines and Iraqi forces surrounding Fallujah were gearing up for a
major offensive on the city, where people had piled up sandbags and placed
roadblocks in the streets to face a looming invasion.
While almost two-thirds of the 300,000 residents have fled the restive
town, a number of between 1,000 and 5,000 men were stayingin their houses and
determined to fight to the last.
Fallujah is located roughly 69 km (43 miles) west of Baghdad onthe
Euphrates River and is on the main road connecting Baghdad to Jordan. It is
known as the "city of mosques" for the more than 200mosques found in the city
and surrounding villages.
As a historical city, Fallujah was inhabited in Babylonian times. The
origin of the town's name is in some doubt, but one theory is that its Syriac
name, Pallugtha, is derived from the word "division" because evidence shows that
millennia ago a branchof the Euphrates divided off at that point.
Fallujah was a small and rather unimportant town for most of its history
under the Persians and Arab Caliphates, and in 1947 the town had only about
10,000 inhabitants.
The city grew after Iraqi independence with the influx of oil wealth into
the country. Under Saddam Hussein, Fallujah came to bean important area of
support for the regime, along with the rest of the region that has come to be
known as the Sunni Triangle. Many senior Ba'ath Party officials were natives of
the city. Enditem
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