The Jerusalem Post

Iraqi general: A third of west Mosul now retaken

600,000 civilians still trapped in ISIS-controlled areas • 200,000 displaced from their homes

- • By JOHN DAVISON

MOSUL (Reuters) – Iraqi forces have retaken around 30% of west Mosul from Islamic State insurgents, a commander of the elite Counter Terrorism Service said on Sunday, as soldiers pushed further into the jihadists’ territory.

Federal police and Rapid Response units said they had entered the Bab al-Tob area of the Old City, where the fight is expected to be toughest due to narrow alleyways through which armored vehicles cannot pass.

The terrorists are vastly outnumbere­d and outgunned by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led coalition and are defending their last major stronghold in Iraq using suicide car bombs, snipers and mortars.

As many as 600,000 civilians are trapped with the jihadists inside the city which Iraqi forces have effectivel­y sealed off from the remaining territory that Islamic State controls in Syria and Iraq.

CTS troops stormed the al-Jadida and al-Aghawat districts on Sunday, Maj.-Gen. Maan al-Saadi told reporters in Mosul, saying the insurgents were showing signs of weakness despite initial “fierce” resistance.

“The enemy has lost its fighting power and its resolve has weakened. It has begun to lose command and control,” he said, adding that around 17 out of 40 western districts had been retaken.

Saadi said he expected it would take less time to recapture the western half of the city than the east, which was cleared in January after 100 days of fighting.

More than 200,000 Mosul residents have been displaced since the start of the campaign in October, of which more than 65,000 fled their homes in the past two weeks alone, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

In the Mansour district, from which Islamic State was driven several days ago, residents collected aid brought by volunteers from east Mosul while helicopter­s circled overhead, firing heavy machine guns and missiles at targets in the city.

It has been three weeks since Iraqi forces launched a campaign to recapture districts west of the Tigris River that bisects Mosul.

A federal police spokesman said his forces along with the Rapid Response division, an elite Interior Ministry unit, are now around 300 meters from the Old Bridge – one of five that connected west Mosul to east. The southernmo­st two are already controlled by Iraqi forces.

Losing Mosul would be a major blow to Islamic State. It is by far the largest city Islamic State has held since the group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi proclaimed a caliphate spanning Iraq and Syria from a mosque in Mosul in the summer of 2014.

The group is expected to pose a continuing threat, reverting to insurgent tactics such as bombings.

As an array of forces dismantle Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliphate across Iraq and Syria, more evidence is emerging of the war crimes committed by the Sunni Islamists, who targeted Shi’ites and religious minorities as well as opponents from their own sect.

A Shi’ite paramilita­ry spokesman said on Sunday a mass grave had been found containing the remains of “hundreds” of mainly Shi’ite inmates who were killed when Islamic State overran the Badush prison in June 2014.

The Iraqi army and a Shi’ite paramilita­ry group called the Abbas Division recaptured the Badush area in recent days as they cut remaining Islamic State supply lines to Mosul, completing the encircleme­nt of the city.

 ?? (Zohra Bensemra/Reuters) ?? A WOMAN FLEES her home in western Mosul yesterday while Iraqi forces battle with Islamic State jihadists.
(Zohra Bensemra/Reuters) A WOMAN FLEES her home in western Mosul yesterday while Iraqi forces battle with Islamic State jihadists.

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