National Post

MOSQUE CAPTURE MEANS ‘ END’ OF ISIL ‘ CALIPHATE’

‘We will not relent,’ declares Iraqi PM

- SUSANNAH GEORGE

MOSUL • Iraq’s prime minister declared an end to the ISIL caliphate Thursday after Iraqi forces captured the compound of a landmark mosque in Mosul that was blown up last week by the Islamic State group.

“We are seeing the end of the fake Daesh state. The liberation of Mosul proves that,” Haider al- Abadi said, using the Arabic acronym for ISIL in a statement posted to twitter. “We will not relent, our brave forces will bring victory,” he added.

But even as t he Iraqi leader issued his statement, heavy clashes continued to unfold in Mosul — filling field hospitals and forcing hundreds to flee.

The destroyed al- Nuri mosque retaken by Iraqi special forces Thursday following a dawn push is a hugely symbolic win. The 12th- century landmark is where ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi made his only public appearance in July 2014, declaring a self- styled Islamic “caliphate,” encompassi­ng territorie­s then held by ISIL in Syria and Iraq.

Iraqi and coalition officials said ISIL blew up the mosque complex last week. The Islamic State group has blamed a U. S. airstrike for the destructio­n, a claim rejected by a spokesman for the U. S.- led coalition who said coalition planes “did not conduct strikes in that area at that time.”

The advances Thursday come as Iraqi troops are pushing deeper into the Old City, a densely populated neighbourh­ood west of the Tigris River where ISIL fighters are making their last stand in Iraq’s secondlarg­est city. Clashes were ongoing into the evening Thursday, according to Associated Press reporters on the scene.

Last week Iraqi forces launched the operation to retake the Old City’s narrow alleyways and dense clusters of homes, embarking on some of the most difficult urban combat in the ISIL fight to date.

ISIL now holds fewer than two square kilometres of territory inside Mosul, but the advances have come at considerab­le cost.

Damaged and destroyed houses dot the route Iraqi forces have carved into the congested district and the stench of rotting bodies rises from beneath mounds of rubble.

“There are hundreds of bodies under the rubble,” said special forces Maj. Dhia Thamir, deployed inside the Old City. He added that all the dead bodies along the special forces’ route were of ISIL fighters.

Special forces Maj. Gen. Sami al-Aridi acknowledg­ed that some civilians have been killed by airstrikes in the fight for the Old City. “Of course there is collateral damage, it is always this way in war,” he said.

U. S.- led coalition spokesman Col. Ryan Dillon told reporters at the Pentagon that victory in Mosul was “imminent” and would likely occur “in days rather than weeks.”

But, he continued, “the Old City still remains a difficult, dense, suffocatin­g fight — tight alleyways with booby traps, civilians, and ( ISIL) fighters around every corner.”

Some 300 ISIL fighters are holed up inside the Old City, according to Iraq’s special forces, along with an estimated 50,000 civilians, according to the United Nations.

Nearly a thousand civilians fled Mosul’s Old City Thursday, according to Col. Ali al- Kenani, an Iraqi intelligen­ce officer at a west Mosul screening centre. Families covered in dust huddled in the shade of half- destroyed storefront­s waiting for flat- bed trucks to move them to camps.

Even as the battle of Mosul nears an end, the aim of eradicatin­g the group is still far from over. The Islamic State’s black flag still flies over the towns of Tal Afar to the west, and Hawijah to the south. The militants also control stretches of the border with Syria.

 ?? AHMAD AL- RUBAYE / AGENCE FRANCE- PRESSE / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Al-Nuri Mosque in the Old City of Mosul, as seen through the rubble.
AHMAD AL- RUBAYE / AGENCE FRANCE- PRESSE / GETTY IMAGES The Al-Nuri Mosque in the Old City of Mosul, as seen through the rubble.

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