The Free Press Journal

IS destroys mosque in Mosul where it declared ‘caliphate’

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The Islamic State has destroyed an iconic 12th-century mosque in the city of Mosul that was the ideologica­l heart of the terror group and the birthplace of its self-declared caliphate.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on Thursday said the destructio­n of the Great Mosque of alNuri and its leaning minaret is “an official declaratio­n of defeat” by the IS, Efe news reported.

“Blowing up the al-Hadba minaret and the al-Nuri mosque amounts to an official acknowledg­ement of defeat,” Al-Abadi said.

Iraqi forces said IS militants blew up the ancient mosque and its famous leaning minaret on Wednesday as jihadists battled to stop advancing progovernm­ent troops.

It was from this mosque three years ago that the militants’ leader Abu Bakr alBaghdadi declared the terror organisati­on’s so-called caliphate in July 2014.

The IS claimed that American aircraft had destroyed the complex, a claim denied by the US, BBC reported.

Aerial images provided by the internatio­nal coalition showed that the mosque complex lay almost entirely in ruins.

The mosque’s destructio­n prompted condemnati­on, with the senior US commander in Iraq saying that IS had destroyed “one of Mosul and Iraq’s great treasures”.

“This is a crime against the people of Mosul and all of Iraq, and is an example of why this brutal organisati­on must be annihilate­d,” Major General Joseph Martin said. Iraqi joint operations commander, Major General Abdel Amir Yarallah, described it as “another historical crime” committed by the IS.

Iraq’s military said they were on the cusp of capturing the complex just hours before the explosion.

The al-Nuri mosque dated back to 1172 and was Mosul’s most famous Sunni mosque. It was named after the Muslim leader, Nur alDin Mahmoud Zangi, famous for waging jihad against Christian crusaders.

Its 45-metre cylindrica­l leaning minaret was nicknamed “the hunchback” and during the final three years of its 800-year existence it remained under IS control.

The black flag of the IS, which sat atop the minaret, became a geographic­al referencin­g point for the Iraqi coalition troops who have been slowly advancing into the ancient Iraqi city to flush out the IS.

In 2012, the United Nations cultural organisati­on UNESCO signed an agreement with Iraqi authoritie­s to begin restoratio­n works on the minaret but the project was abandoned when two years later the IS swept to power in Mosul.

Mohammed al-Bayati, the head of the Nineveh regional security committee estimated that the operation to conquer IS in Mosul would be completed within a week due to the group’s steady decline.

The effort to reclaim Mosul from IS began in October 2016 and earlier this week saw the start of a final push by the Iraqi Army and its allies against the jihadists.

 ?? AFP ?? Ariel view of the destructed mosque.
AFP Ariel view of the destructed mosque.

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