Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Iraqis: IS blew up mosque in ‘formal declaratio­n of defeat’

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MOSUL, Iraq ( AP) – With their control of Mosul slipping away, Islamic State militants decided to send a message of defiance: They blew up the 12th century al-Nuri Mosque, along with its famous leaning minaret.

The mosque, destroyed Wednesday night, would have been a symbolic prize in the fight for Iraq’s second-largest city. It was from a pulpit in that mosque that the extremists’ leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared a caliphate in the lands they had seized in Iraq and Syria in July 2014.

According to Iraqi officials, the destructio­n of the landmarks indicated that IS defenses are crumbling and the campaign to retake Mosul – launched more than eight months ago – is in its final stages.

“They knew that the battle had been decided in favor of the Iraqi forces and they knew that we were going to enter the mosque in only a few hours,” said Iraqi special forces Lt. Gen. AbdulWahab al-Saadi, adding that his troops were only 50 yards from the mosque site.

“That’s why exploded it,” he said.

Prime Minister Haider they al-Abadi tweeted early Thursday that the mosque’s destructio­n was an admission by the militants that they are losing the fight, calling it a “formal declaratio­n of their defeat.”

Inside western Mosul, residents were still reeling from the loss of the iconic structure that was blown up during the celebratio­n of Laylat al Qadr, the holiest night of the year for Muslims.

The “Night of Power” commemorat­es when the Quran was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad during the holy month of Ramadan, which is in its waning days. The minaret that leaned like Italy’s Tower of Pisa had stood in Mosul for more than 840 years and was known as al-Hadba.

“It is a shock, a real big shock,” Amir al-Jumaili, a professor at the Archaeolog­y College in Mosul, told The Associated Press.

Mohammed Tariq alBayati recalled growing up next to the mosque.

“I was in my grandfathe­r house. I remember we used to play under its shade,” al-Bayati said. After learning of its destructio­n, he said he felt like his childhood had also been demolished.

“It is the city’s icon, I can say that Mosul has died,” the longtime resident added.

An IS statement posted online shortly after the destructio­n of the landmarks was reported by the Ministry of Defense blamed a U.S. airstrike.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Residents walk past the crooked minaret called al-Hadba, or “hunchback,” in a busy market area in Mosul, Iraq, in 2009. Iraq’s ministry of defense says Islamic State militants destroyed the al-Nuri mosque in Mosul and the adjacent iconic leaning...
Associated Press Residents walk past the crooked minaret called al-Hadba, or “hunchback,” in a busy market area in Mosul, Iraq, in 2009. Iraq’s ministry of defense says Islamic State militants destroyed the al-Nuri mosque in Mosul and the adjacent iconic leaning...

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