The Independent

Horror in Mosul rains down from both sides

Hundreds of civilians have allegedly been killed by US-led air strikes on Isis-held areas in recent weeks

- BETHAN MCKERNAN IN BEIRUT

Approximat­ely 230 people are reported to have been killed in what is thought to have been a US-led coalition air strike on an Isis-held neighbourh­ood in Mosul.

A correspond­ent for Rudaw, a Kurdish news agency operating in northern Iraq, said that 137 people – most believed to be civilians – died when a bomb hit a single building in al-Jadida, in the western side of the city yesterday. Another 100 were killed nearby. “Some of the dead were taking shelter inside the homes,” Hevidar Ahmed said from the scene.

A spokespers­on for Central Command, which coordinate­s US military action in Iraq, told The Independen­t they were aware of the loss of civilian life as reported by Rudaw and the informatio­n had been passed on to the civilian casualty team for “further investigat­ion”. Captain Timothy Irish said: “[The US-led coalition] takes all reports of civilian casualties very seriously and assesses all incidents as thoroughly as possible. Coalition forces work diligently to be precise in our air strikes and ensure that all strikes comply with the [internatio­nally agreed] Law of Armed Conflict.”

A daily assessment report from Central Command stated that five strikes near Mosul yesterday had destroyed five Isis units and a sniper team, as well as 11 fighting positions, vehicles and artillery equipment. No other fighting force in the country has the capability to launch an aerial attack of the scale reported.

Iraqi coalition ground forces, backed by a US-led coalition bombing campaign, began the gruelling Operation Inherent Resolve to remove Isis from Mosul in October 2016. The jihadi fighters now hold onto approximat­ely a quarter of the city on the western bank of the River Tigris that cuts through Mosul from north to south.

An estimated 400,000 Iraqis are trapped in the remaining Isis-held areas, the UN’s refugee agency said yesterday. Those caught up in the fighting face growing food shortages or being hit by crossfire if they try to leave. Isis has used civilian homes to shelter fighters and weapons throughout the battle for the city, rigging buildings and streets with explosives to impede Iraqi troops’ progress.

The fighting has come at a heavy price for both Mosul’s residents and Iraqi soldiers: thousands of Iraqi civilians have died in the fighting, and a cumulative total of more than 200,000 displaced from their homes. At least 6,878 civilians were killed in violence mainly inflicted by Isis around the country last year, the United Nations Assistance Mission to Iraq (UNAMI) has said. Many Mosul residents report their loved ones have died as a result of “friendly fire” rather than Isis’s warfare tactics.

AirWars, a UK-based non-profit monitoring the effect of anti-Isis air strikes on civilians, said last week that they believed 370 civilians died in US-led coalition bombing in the first week of March alone. Over the border in Syria in the last week, the US has been accused of killing civilians in two separate bombing incidents: 33 died in a strike near Raqqa which was supposed to target Isis positions, and more than 50 after a strike hit a mosque in Aleppo province rather than an al-Qaeda meeting point.

Removing Isis from Mosul, which is Iraq’s second largest city, will effectivel­y spell the end of Isis as a landholdin­g force in the country, driving the remnants of the group back to their de facto capital of Raqqa. And while losing the city will be a decisive blow, the jihadi organisati­on is expected to pose a renewed threat in the form of an insurgency war against Iraqi forces.

 ??  ?? Around 40,000 Iraqis are trapped in Isis-held territory, according to UN estimates (AFP/Getty)
Around 40,000 Iraqis are trapped in Isis-held territory, according to UN estimates (AFP/Getty)

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