More of Mosul falls to Iraqi armed forces
Hundreds of civilians flee the province as the Iraqi army captures two more districts.
Mosul began in October.
“We left with no water, food or electricity,” said 63-yearold Abu Qahtan, the elder of a group of 41 people from five families. “We left with the clothes on our backs.”
Iraqi forces have taken much of Mosul from the militants who overran the city in June 2014. The military now controls the eastern districts and are making advances in the west.
ISIS fighters, holding out in the Old City, are surrounded in the northwest and are using booby traps, sniper and mortar fire to defend themselves.
On Saturday, artillery and gun fire could be heard as families arrived from Hay al-Tanak district which they said was still half controlled by the militants.
Troops, backed by helicopters, were moving towards the al-Nuri mosque where, nearly three years ago, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced his self-declared caliphate spanning parts of Iraq and Syria.
A Reuters reporter, standing within sight of the mosque, saw heavy smoke in that area after an air strike.
The US-trained CounterTerrorism Service (CTS) has retaken the nearby alThaura and al-Saha districts, statements said.
CTS commander Major General Maan Saadi said his troops were linking up with Iraq’s Federal Police moving in on the Old City from a different position.
“We are completing the encirclement of the terrorists in the Old City,” he told Reuters.
Hundreds of thousands of civilians are still trapped in western Mosul, where Iraqi forces are making slow progress against Islamic State in what is a labyrinth of narrow streets.
As of 20 April, some 503,000 people have been displaced from Mosul, of which 91,000 have returned, a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency UNHCR said, citing government figures.
Mosul, Iraq’s secondlargest city, is the militants’ last urban stronghold in the country.