Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Iraq makes gains in Mosul against Islamic State militants

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MOSUL, Iraq — Iraq’s special forces continued to push back Islamic State militants in the eastern sector of Mosul on Friday in intense fighting that forced scores of people to flee their homes.

The fighting in the Quds neighborho­od came a day after Iraqi forces broke a two-week lull in fighting to stage a multiprong­ed offensive in eastern Mosul, east of the Tigris River.

The latest push, aided by airstrikes and artillery from a U.S.-led coalition, is taking place under clear skies and, if the weather holds, was expected to continue until all forces in the eastern sector reach the Tigris River.

Iraqi government forces launched a large-scale offensive in mid-October to retake Mosul, the last major urban center held by the extremist group in Iraq. The offensive, however, stalled about two months later because of the presence inside Mosul of some one million civilians, stiff IS resistance and the lack of urban warfare experience among some Iraqi military units.

In the northern sector of Mosul, troops of the 16th Division, bolstered by reinforcem­ents, began their own push, storming the Hadbaa district to dislodge the militants.

The fighting in eastern Mosul forced scores of residents to flee on foot Friday, making their way through dirt berms, debris and government troops’ firing positions to find relative security elsewhere in the city. In scenes that have become common since the battle began in October, adults carried children and the young helped the elderly as they walked to safety while waving a white flag.

Ambulances with wailing sirens dashed from the battlefiel­d to field hospitals elsewhere in the city. Seriously injured civilians were sent to Irbil, capital of the Kurdish region.

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