Toronto Star

Iraqi forces encircle area held by Daesh

Hundreds of civilians flee as U.S.-backed soldiers advance on Mosul’s Old City

- QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BAGHDAD— U.S.-backed Iraqi forces were moving to surround Mosul’s Old City on Thursday, a week after launching a fresh push to drive Daesh militants from areas they still hold, according to an Iraqi officer overseeing the operation.

Iraqi special forces Lt. Gen. Sami al-Arathi said battle plans had changed and a northern advance was launched last week after Iraqi forces struggled to push into the Old City from the south.

As Iraqi army and federal police forces push from the north, the country’s special forces are moving toward the Old City through Mosul’s western industrial neighbourh­oods.

“The multi-axis advance . . . has presented the enemy with more dilemmas than they can react to,” U.S.led coalition spokespers­on John Dorrian told reporters during a press conference Wednesday. Dorrian said over the past week Iraqi forces retook more than 30 square kilometres of terrain from Daesh, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

Hundreds of civilians could be seen fleeing the fighting Thursday. A Mosul woman was given a cigarette by an Iraqi soldier, another was handed a cane. A few wounded civilians were evacuated from the front line and a woman who appeared to have lost both her legs was rushed away on the hood of an armoured vehicle.

The operation to retake Mosul began in October and the eastern half of the city was retaken earlier this year. The battle for the more densely populated western half, including the Old City, has been slower. Mosul fell to Daesh nearly three years ago when the militant group blitzed into Iraq from neighbouri­ng Syria and took nearly a third of the country under its control. Today a fraction of western Mosul is the last significan­t urban terrain Daesh holds in Iraq.

The UN estimates some 350,000 people remain trapped in Daeshheld parts of western Mosul. Clashes over the past week have forced more than 11,000 civilians to flee.

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Members of Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Service stand guard as displaced Iraqis from western Mosul evacuate their homes on Thursday.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Members of Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Service stand guard as displaced Iraqis from western Mosul evacuate their homes on Thursday.
 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? An Iraqi boy from western Mosul flees his home on Thursday. The UN estimates 350,000 people remain trapped in Daesh-held parts of Mosul.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES An Iraqi boy from western Mosul flees his home on Thursday. The UN estimates 350,000 people remain trapped in Daesh-held parts of Mosul.

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