Toronto Star

Iraqi town rises up against Daesh fighters

Troops headed for Mosul find residents of al-Hud killed militants themselves

- BRAM JANSSEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AL-HUD, IRAQ— The mutilated bodies of Daesh fighters were still strewn on the ground of this northern Iraqi town on Wednesday. One was burned. Another’s face was flattened by abuse.

Iraqi troops on the march toward Mosul moved into al-Hud a day earlier and declared it liberated. But they found residents had already risen up and killed many of the militants in the town themselves.

With the offensive to recapture Mosul in its third day, Iraqi forces advancing from the south and east are fighting to retake the towns and villages that dot the plains and line the Tigris River leading to the city. At times, they’ve met fierce resistance, with the militants sending explosives-packed vehicles careening toward the troops’ positions.

This area has been under control of the militants ever since the summer of 2014, when fighters from Daesh, also known as ISIS or ISIL, captured Mosul and much of the north in a lightning advance.

In al-Hud, a Sunni Arab town on the Tigris, residents saw their chance to get rid of them. On Monday, a man paraded through town with an Iraqi flag in a show of defiance, residents told The Associated Press. Daesh fighters shot and killed him.

News spread among the hundreds of people living in the town, and soon a crowd turned on the militants. One resident, Ahmed Mohammed, said he and others shot a militant who was hiding by an outhouse behind a shop. “That didn’t work. Then one of our guys came and threw a grenade on him from the top,” he said.

It was not clear how many militants had been in the village or how many were killed. The Associated Press saw at least five bodies.

The head of the Iraqi military’s operations command for Nineveh province, where the offensive is taking place, confirmed the residents’ account. “Before we reached the village they fought them and killed many of them,” Maj.-Gen. Najim alJobori said.

On Wednesday, residents were celebratin­g. Children ran toward an Iraqi military convoy waving peace signs while others threw stones at the bodies of the dead Daesh fighters.

At Qayara air base, near al-Hud, an Iraqi general called on Daesh fighters in Mosul to surrender. Lt.-Gen. Talib Shaghati told reporters that up to 6,000 militants are in the city.

Over the past day, Daesh sent 12 car bombs against the troops, all of which were blown up before reaching their targets, he said, adding that Iraqi troops suffered a small number of casualties from the mortar rounds. The officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters, did not provide specific figures.

At least 5,000 people fled the Mosul area to a refugee camp in northeaste­rn Syria in the past 10 days, with a further 1,000 waiting to enter at the border, Save the Children said.

Tarik Kadir, head of the group’s Mosul response, said conditions there are “among the worst we’ve seen.” More than 9,000 people in the camp only have access to dirty, untreated water and have to share 16 washrooms, leaving the area polluted by human waste “with a looming risk of disease,” the group said.

United Nations humanitari­an chief Stephen O’Brien told the Security Council that no large-scale displaceme­nt of civilians has been reported since the operation began.

But he said the UN anticipate­s “a displaceme­nt wave of some 200,000 people over the coming weeks, with up to one million displaced in the course of the operation in a worstcase scenario.”

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