The Niagara Falls Review

Clashes erupt in Mosul

Violence underscore­s dangers still posed by Islamic State militants in liberated city

- BRAM JANSSEN

MOSUL, Iraq — Sporadic clashes erupted in Mosul on Tuesday, a day after Iraq’s prime minister declared “total victory” over Islamic State, with several airstrikes hitting the Old City that was the scene of the fierce battle’s final days.

Plumes of smoke rose into the air as Islamic State mortar shells landed near Iraqi positions and heavy gunfire could be heard on the western edge of the Old City.

The clashes underscore­d the dangers still posed by the militants after Iraqi forces announced they retook full control of Mosul, the country’s second-largest city, three years after it was seized by extremists bent on building a global caliphate.

Meanwhile, Amnesty Internatio­nal warned in a report released Tuesday that the conflict in Mosul has created a “civilian catastroph­e,” with the extremists carrying out forced displaceme­nt, summary killings and using civilians as human shields.

The report also detailed violations by Iraqi forces and the U.S.led coalition.

“The scale and gravity of the loss of civilian lives during the military operation to retake Mosul must immediatel­y be publicly acknowledg­ed at the highest levels of government in Iraq and states that are part of the U.S.-led coalition,” said Lynn Maalouf, the research director for Mideast at Amnesty.

The report, which covers the first five months of this year, noted how Islamic State fighters moved civilians with them around the city, preventing them from escaping, creating battle spaces with dense civilian population­s while “Iraqi forces and the U.S.-led coalition failed to adapt their tactics.”

The Iraqi forces and the U.S.-led coalition “continued to use imprecise, explosive weapons with wide area effects in densely populated urban environmen­ts,” Amnesty stated, adding that some violations may constitute war crimes.

On Monday evening, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi came to Mosul for the second day in a row to declare “total victory,” flanked by his senior military leadership at a small base on the edge of the Old City. But he also alluded to the brutality of the conflict, saying the triumph had been achieved “by the blood of our martyrs.”

In Geneva, the UN human rights chief urged Iraq’s government to ensure that human rights will be respected in post-Islamic State Mosul.

Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein described Mosul’s fall as the “turning point” in the conflict against Islamic State, but warned the group continues to subject people to “daily horrors” in its remaining stronghold­s of Tal Afar, west of Mosul, and Hawijah, north of Baghdad.

“Horrific though the crimes of ISIL are, there is no place for vengeance,” said Zeid, who is a Jordanian prince, using an alternativ­e acronym for Islamic State.

He cited allegation­s of threats of collective punishment and forced evictions in Mosul by Iraqi security forces and their allies. He also cited three years of rights violations during Islamic State’s control of Mosul, including abuses such as sexual slavery of women and girls that “have left deep scars on Iraqi society.”

In Baghdad, Shiite politician Karim al-Nouri warned that defeating Islamic State in Mosul doesn’t mean that “terrorism” is finished and urged the government to review its policies for dealing with Sunni areas of the country to “avoid previous mistakes that led to the emergence” of Islamic State.

The government needs to work on “removing fears of marginaliz­ation and terrorism affiliatio­n in Sunni areas,” said al-Nouri, a senior member of Badr Organizati­on. He said he believes the Iraqi security forces should stay in Mosul until it is fully secure, before handing over to local forces.

Lawmaker Intisar al-Jabouri from Nineveh province, where Mosul is the capital, said that uprooting Islamic State’s “extremism ideology” was key for a peaceful future in Mosul, which reeled under the extremists’ harsh rule for three years.

She urged Baghdad to invest in “good relations” between the residents and the security forces and take all “necessary measures to prevent terrorism groups from returning to Mosul.”

While Mosul fell to Islamic State in a matter of days in 2014, the campaign to retake the city, which began last October, has lasted nearly nine months.

For more than two years before the operation started, Iraqi forces backed by coalition airstrikes slowly clawed back territory from Islamic State elsewhere in Iraq, and tens of thousands of Iraqi troops went through a massive coalition training program.

The Islamic State defeat in Mosul dealt a huge blow to the group’s socalled Islamic “caliphate” — territory that the militants seized, spanning large swaths of both Iraq and Syria — but also killed thousands, left entire neighbourh­oods in ruins and displaced nearly 900,000 from their homes.

Thousands of civilians are estimated to have been killed in the fight for the city, according to the provincial council of Nineveh, where Mosul is the capital — a toll that does not include those still believed buried under collapsed buildings.

 ?? HAIDAR HAMDANI/GETTY IMAGES ?? Iraqis celebrate in the streets of Najaf, Iraq, on Tuesday, a day after the government’s announceme­nt of the liberation of the embattled city of Mosul.
HAIDAR HAMDANI/GETTY IMAGES Iraqis celebrate in the streets of Najaf, Iraq, on Tuesday, a day after the government’s announceme­nt of the liberation of the embattled city of Mosul.

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