Toronto Star

Iraqi troops push deeper into Mosul

Daesh militants hit back using dense inner-city population as shield from airstrikes

- SUSANNAH GEORGE AND QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MOSUL,IRAQ— Daesh fighters launched counteratt­acks Saturday against Iraqi special forces in eastern Mosul, emerging from populated areas deeper in the city to target the troops with mortars and suicide car bombs in clashes that raged late into the night.

Artillery shelling thundered as snipers traded fire from rooftops and civilians emerged from the front lines waving white flags. There were fresh indication­s other residents were being held back by the militants to be used as human shields.

The battle highlights the challenges ahead for Iraqi forces as they press into more densely populated neighbourh­oods of the country’s second largest city, where they will not be able to rely as much on airstrikes because of the risk of killing civilians.

“Daesh is in the city centre and we must be very careful as our forces advance,” said Maj. Gen. Sami al-Aridi of the Iraqi special forces.

The special forces entered the Gogjali district, on the eastern edge of Mosul, on Tuesday, marking their first major foray into the city itself after more than two weeks of fighting in its rural outskirts.

Daesh, also known as ISIS or ISIL, fought back Saturday, pushing the special forces from the southern edge of the neighbourh­ood. Both sides fired mortar rounds and automatic weapons, while the Iraqi troops also responded with artillery. Snipers dueled from rooftops in residentia­l areas, where most buildings are just two stories high. Dozens of civilians emerged from their homes over the course of the day. Many civilians travelling with children and elderly relatives said they had to walk more than 10 kilometres to reach a camp for the displaced. Just a few kilometres from the clashes, Iraqi officers co-ordinating airstrikes with the U.S .- led coalition watched live drone footage showing a team of Daesh fighters regrouping near the front line.

“They’re moving in front of the mosque,” an Iraqi soldier said as he called in an airstrike, which moments later flattened a small building. Civilians moved into the area soon thereafter, and the soldiers said the militants appeared to have corralled them there to prevent further strikes.

“Daesh have continued to hide behind civilians and facilitate harm to them,” said Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman for the U.S.led coalition, which has been launching airstrikes to aid the Iraqi advance.

He said Iraqi forces and the co- alition “developed a plan that is intended to reduce the possibilit­y of civilian casualties and collateral damage.”

But Iraqi Cpt. Naqib Jaff, who was covered in dust after helping to hold positions east of Mosul overnight, said the air support “hasn’t been enough” and that the coalition was only striking suicide car bombs.

He said that in previous operations against Daesh-held towns and cities, civilians would be moved away from the front lines, allowing forces to advance. But he said in Mosul, his men have been ordered to keep families inside their homes.

“We’ve never been in such a situation before. We would be fighting and there would be a family right next to us,” he said. The government has ordered residents to stay inside, fearing a mass exodus from the city, which is still home to more than 1 million people.

The advance of the Iraqi forces was also slowed by fortificat­ions erected by the extremists in the more than two years since they captured the city. Trenches and berms have turned the streets and alleyways of a neighbourh­ood once named after former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein into a maze.

Satellite images show rows of concrete barricades, earthen mounds and rubble blocking key routes into the city centre. The images showed that Daesh fighters have cleared terrain and levelled buildings around Mosul airport and a nearby former military base on the west bank of the Tigris.

Mosul is the last major Daesh stronghold in Iraq, and driving the militants out would deal a major blow to their self-styled caliphate stretching into neighbouri­ng Syria.

Iraqi forces have made uneven progress since the operation to retake Mosul began on Oct. 17. The territory they have retaken inside Mosul is just a small fraction of the city, which measures more than 15 kilometres across.

Up to 1,600 civilians may have been loaded onto trucks and forcibly relocated from Hamam al-Alil to the Daesh-held town of Tal Afar.

“We’ve never been in such a situation before. We would be fighting and there would be a family right next to us.” IRAQI CPT. NAQIB JAFF

 ?? ZOHRA BENSEMRA/REUTERS ?? A boy in eastern Mosul emerges from his house with a white flag after Iraqi forces drive out Daesh fighters.
ZOHRA BENSEMRA/REUTERS A boy in eastern Mosul emerges from his house with a white flag after Iraqi forces drive out Daesh fighters.

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