Waterloo Region Record

Iraqi town outside Mosul rises up against militants

- Bram Janssen

AL-HUD, IRAQ — The mutilated bodies of Islamic State group fighters were still strewn on the ground of this northern Iraqi town. One was burned. Another’s face was flattened by abuse.

Iraqi troops on the march toward Mosul moved into al-Hud on Tuesday and declared it liberated. But they found residents had already risen up and killed many of the militants in the town themselves, and the evidence was still on display Wednesday.

With the offensive to recapture Mosul in its third day, Iraqi forces advancing from the south and east are fighting to retake the towns and villages that dot the plains and line the Tigris River leading to the city. At times, they’ve met fierce resistance, with the militants sending explosives-packed vehicles careening toward the troops’ positions.

This area has been under control of the militants ever since the summer of 2014, when IS fighters captured Mosul and much of the north in a lightning advance. In al-Hud, a Sunni Arab town on the Tigris, residents saw their chance to get rid of them. On Monday, a man paraded through town with an Iraqi flag in a show of defiance, residents told The Associated Press. IS fighters shot and killed him.

A group of residents gathered in a shop, news spread among the hundreds of people living in the town, and soon a crowd turned on the militants.

One resident, Ahmed Mohammed, said he and others shot a militant who was hiding by an outhouse behind a shop. “That didn’t work. Then one of our guys came and threw a grenade on him from the top,” he said Wednesday.

Gasim Mohammed said his father was killed in the uprising against the militants. He kicked the head of one of the bodies. “This one smells like a dog,” he said.

“I hate them. Anyone I catch, I’ll drink his blood. Even if it’s a child,” he said.

It was not clear how many militants had been in the village or how many were killed. The Associated Press saw at least five bodies.

The head of the Iraqi military’s operations command for Nineveh province where the offensive is taking place confirmed the residents’ account.

“Before we reached the village they fought them and killed many of them,” Maj. Gen. Najim al-Jobori said.

On Wednesday, residents were celebratin­g. Children ran toward an Iraqi military convoy waving peace signs while others threw stones at the bodies of the dead IS fighters. Residents fired celebrator­y rounds into the air and cars long the main road still flew white flags of surrender.

At Qayara airbase, near al-Hud, a senior Iraqi general called on Islamic State group fighters in Mosul to surrender. Lt. Gen. Talib Shaghati told reporters that up to 6,000 IS fighters are in the city. East of Mosul, troops have moved about a kilometre (half-mile) from Hamdaniyah, a historical­ly Christian town.

 ?? MARKO DROBNJAKOV­IC, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Iraqi army soldiers raise their weapons in celebratio­n on the outskirts of Qayyarah, Iraq, Wednesday. A senior Iraqi general on Wednesday called on Iraqis fighting for the Islamic State group in Mosul to surrender as a military operation entered its...
MARKO DROBNJAKOV­IC, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Iraqi army soldiers raise their weapons in celebratio­n on the outskirts of Qayyarah, Iraq, Wednesday. A senior Iraqi general on Wednesday called on Iraqis fighting for the Islamic State group in Mosul to surrender as a military operation entered its...

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