Arab Times

Iraqis push toward Mosul

Baghdad bombings kill 11

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BARTELLA, Iraq, Oct 24, (AP): Iraqi forces fought their way into two villages near Mosul on Monday as the offensive to retake the extremist-held city entered its second week and a rights group urged a probe into a suspected airstrike that hit a mosque, killing over a dozen civilians.

Iraqi special forces began shelling IS positions before dawn near Bartella, a historical­ly Christian town to the east of Mosul that they had retaken last week. With patriotic music blaring from loudspeake­rs on their Humvees, they then pushed into the village of Tob Zawa, about 9 kilometers (5 ó miles) from Mosul, amid heavy clashes.

After entering the village, they allowed more than 30 people who had been sheltering in a school to escape the fighting.

The Iraqi Federal Police, a militaryst­yle force, pushed into a small village in the Shura district south of Mosul, where they fired a large anti-aircraft gun and rocket-propelled grenades as they battled IS militants. They later appeared to have secured the village, a cluster of squat homes on a desert plain, and handed out water and other aid to civilians.

Destroying

The US-led coalition said it had carried out six airstrikes near Mosul on Sunday, destroying 19 fighting positions and 17 vehicles, as well as rocket and mortar launchers, artillery and tunnels.

Human Rights Watch meanwhile called for an investigat­ion into last week’s purported airstrike in northern Iraq that struck the women’s section of a Shiite mosque in the town of Daquq.

The strike happened amid a large Islamic State assault on the nearby city of Kirkuk that was meant to distract the Iraqi forces and their allies from the massive operation around Mosul, the country’s second largest city.

The IS attack on Kirkuk, some 170 kilometers (100 miles) southeast of Mosul, lasted for two days and killed at least 80 people, mainly members of the Kurdish security forces, who assumed control of the city in 2014 as Iraqi forces crumbled before an IS advance.

Human Rights Watch said Daquq’s residents believe Friday’s attack was an airstrike because of the extent of the destructio­n and because planes could be heard flying overhead. The New York-based watchdog said at least 13 people were reported killed.

The US-led coalition and the Iraqi military, which are waging the offensive to drive IS from Mosul, are the only parties known to be flying military aircraft over Iraq.

Col. John Dorrian, a US military spokesman, said the coalition had “definitive­ly determined” that it did not conduct the airstrike that killed civilians in Daquq, and had shared its findings with the Iraqi government, which is carrying out its own investigat­ion.

“The Coalition uses precision munitions and an exhaustive process to reduce the possibilit­y of civilian casualties and collateral damage because the preservati­on of civilian life is (of) paramount importance to us,” Dorrian said.

Iraqi Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, the spokesman for the Joint Military Command, confirmed the Iraqi government was investigat­ing the attack. He declined to say whether Iraqi or coalition planes were flying in the area at the time of the explosion.

As in Kirkuk, IS launched an attack on the western Iraqi town of Rutba, hundreds of kilometers (miles) away from Mosul, on Sunday. Rasool said the situation there “is completely under control,” and IS militants have no presence inside the town.

In Baghdad, meanwhile, a series of small bombings killed 11 people and wounded another 35, according to police and hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the informatio­n.

The campaign to retake Mosul comes after months of planning and involves more than 25,000 Iraqi troops, Kurdish forces, Sunni tribal fighters and state-sanctioned Shiite militias. It is expected to take weeks, if not months, to drive IS out of Iraq’s second largest city, which is still home to more than a million people.

 ??  ?? Iraq’s elite counterter­rorism forces advance toward Islamic State positions as fighting to retake the extremist-held city of Mosul enters its second week, in the village of Tob Zawa, outside Mosul on Oct 24. A convoy of special forces advanced toward the village of Tob Zawa, Monday, encounteri­ng roadside bombs and trading heavy fire with the militants. Loudspeake­rs on the Humvees blaredIraq­i patriotic music as they pushed toward the village.
Iraq’s elite counterter­rorism forces advance toward Islamic State positions as fighting to retake the extremist-held city of Mosul enters its second week, in the village of Tob Zawa, outside Mosul on Oct 24. A convoy of special forces advanced toward the village of Tob Zawa, Monday, encounteri­ng roadside bombs and trading heavy fire with the militants. Loudspeake­rs on the Humvees blaredIraq­i patriotic music as they pushed toward the village.

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