Cape Argus

IS uses female suicide bombers

Horror tactics as battle for west Mosul reaches its end

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AS THE battle to retake the Old City of west Mosul from Islamic State (IS) militants enters its final phase, the extremists are using women as suicide bombers. Four female suicide bombers, some of them teenagers, blew themselves up on Monday, and Iraqi security forces forced terrified children to strip off their clothes in case they too had been used by the insurgents as human explosives.

Seven other women bearing explosives attempted to approach troops but were intercepte­d, the BBC reported yesterday.

Iraqi commanders are now ordering women to remove their veils while men were being told to remove their shirts before approachin­g soldiers.

Fierce clashes are continuing as thousands of Iraqi security forces, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Sunni Arab tribesmen and Shia militiamen, assisted by US-led coalition warplanes and military advisers, attempt to free west Mosul from the insurgents.

A major offensive to free east Mosul began in October last year and by January that part of the city was under the control of Iraqi security forces.

In February, Iraqi forces launched the fight to retake west Mosul, but warned this would involve a lot more bloodshed and be harder due to the narrow, winding alleyways in the Old City of west Mosul, where thousands of civilians are crammed.

“The fighting is becoming harder every day because of the nature of the Old City,” said Lieutenant-General Abdulghani Al Assadi, a commander of Iraq’s elite Counter-Terrorism Service.

Currently, the last stronghold of IS is the Old City, which has been blasted by air strikes and artillery salvos, with local commanders expecting to take full control within five days.

Brigadier-General Yahya Rasool said “victory is very near”.

According to Iraqi security force estimates, there are about 300 militants left in Mosul, compared with nearly 6 000 at the start of the offensive.

Meanwhile, the UN estimates that about 100 000 civilians might still remain trapped as IS increasing­ly uses desperate civilians as human shields.

Aid workers said hundreds of civilians emerged from the rubble of the besieged neighbourh­ood on Monday as Iraqi Special Forces went door-to-door clearing homes.

Many who remained in the militant-controlled areas of the city are injured and malnourish­ed, the aid workers added. – ANA

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? DESPERATE: Iraqi civilians flee through a destroyed alley as Iraqi Special Forces continue their advance against Islamic State militants in Mosul on Sunday.
PICTURE: AP DESPERATE: Iraqi civilians flee through a destroyed alley as Iraqi Special Forces continue their advance against Islamic State militants in Mosul on Sunday.

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