Hawija (, Al-Ḥawīja) is the central town of Al-Hawija District in the Kirkuk Province of Iraq, west of Kirkuk, and north of Baghdad. The town has a population of about 480,000 inhabitants.
Hawija District has approximately 520,000 inhabitants, mostly populated by Sunni Arabs.
An Islamic State operated prison was raided in the area by Kurdish and American special operations forces on October 21, 2015. After about 70 prisoners were freed, the US bombed the facility.
During IS occupation, Hawija's residents have suffered severe shortages of critical supplies, including food, water, and medicine. Many of the town's residents have fled. The Kurdistan Regional Government estimates that 18,000 people fled Hawija in August 2016; they say that approximately 400–450 families arrive at Peshmerga checkpoints from Hawija each week. The UN estimates about 300 arrivals at the Debaga Refugee Camp (one of the largest in Iraq) each week. Unconfirmed reports indicated that IS is executing civilians caught trying to escape, and planting land mines to keep residents in place.
Hawija, along with Mosul, is a place where IS members frequently carry out mass executions. For example, on August 6, 2016, they were said to have executed at least 100 people.
ISIL-occupied Hawija became isolated from the rest of IS's territory in July 2016 during the Battle of Mosul, when Al-Shirqat was captured by Iraqi troops. Hawija was IS's last enclave in central Iraq.
On September 21, 2017, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced an offensive to reclaim the city after over three years of IS rule. The city was liberated from IS by October 4, 2017.
In October 2022, Khadija Ahmad Murshid, also known as "Umm Rayyan", was chosen as the Mukhtar of the Al-Hurriyya neighborhood in Hawija, making her the first woman recorded to hold the position of Mukhtar in the Kirkuk Province.
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