Kuwait Times

Iraq Army chief says Mosul battle to take 3 more weeks

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BAGHDAD: An Iraqi commander expects to dislodge Islamic State from Mosul in May despite resistance from militants in the densely populated Old City district. The battle should be completed “in a maximum of three weeks”, the Iraqi army’s chief of staff, Lieutenant General Othman AlGhanmi, was quoted as saying by state-run newspaper Al-Sabah yesterday.

A US-led internatio­nal coalition is providing air and ground support for the offensive in Mosul, the largest city in northern Iraq, which fell to hardline Sunni Muslim fighters in June 2014. Islamic State has lost most of the city’s districts since the offensive began in October and is now surrounded in the northweste­rn districts, including the historic Old City centre.

The United Nations believes up to half a million people remain in the area controlled by the militants, 400,000 of whom are in the Old City with little food and water and no access to hospitals. The militants have dug in between the civilians, often launching deadly counter-attacks to repel forces closing in on the Old City’s Grand AlNouri Mosque, from where Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi declared a caliphate over parts of Iraq and Syria.

Slavery

A group of 36 Yazidi survivors had been rescued after three years of “slavery” under Islamic State’s rule, the United Nations said yesterday. Since Friday, the women and girls from the group had been receiving lodging, clothing, medical and psychologi­cal aid in Duhok, a Kurdish city north of Mosul, said a statement from U.N. Humanitari­an Coordinato­r for Iraq Lise Grande. The Yazidis, whose beliefs combine elements from several Middle Eastern religions, were the most persecuted community under Islamic State which considered them devil-worshipper­s. The UN estimates that up to 1,500 Yazidi women and girls remain in captivity, suffering abuse. Iraqi forces estimate the number of Islamic State fighters still in Mosul at 200 to 300, mostly foreigners, down from nearly 6,000 when the offensive started but they are still capable of deadly counter-attacks on the tens of thousands of soldiers and paramilita­ry groups arrayed against them. —Reuters

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