Arab Times

Liberation of Mosul imminent, IS days numbered: UN envoy

Iraqi forces gear up for final assault

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UNITED NATIONS, May 23, (Agencies): The liberation of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul “is imminent” and the days of the Islamic State extremist group’s self-declared caliphate “are numbered,” the UN envoy for Iraq said Monday.

But Jan Kubis told the Security Council that despite progress, fighting remains “a tremendous challenge” because IS fighters are increasing­ly using civilians as human shields in “a last-gasp effort that reveals little more than the inherent inhuman barbarity of the terrorists.”

He paid tribute to Iraqi security forces and their coalition partners for trying to limit the impact of military operations to protect civilians, “even if that comes at the cost of prolonging a harsh, bitter campaign that continues to claim both civilian and military lives.”

Iraqi forces, backed by a US-led coalition, officially launched the operation to retake Mosul, the country’s second-largest city, in October. The city’s east was declared “fully liberated” in January and the fight for the west was launched the following month. It has been marked by some of the most grueling and deadly combat in the fight against IS in Iraq to date.

The city fell to IS fighters during a lightning charge in June 2014 that left nearly a third of Iraq in IS militants’ hands and plunged the country into its most severe crisis since the US-led invasion in 2003.

Campaign

The Islamic State’s “caliphate,” declared after the June 2014 military campaign, once stretched across northern Syria through much of northern and western Iraq. But the group, also known as ISIL and DAESH, is now under attack in both countries and the territory it controls has shrunk.

Kubis said military operations in Iraq are shifting to the remaining areas and pockets where IS extremists are still present. Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has announced that the next steps are to secure the Iraq-Syria border and to liberate west of Ninewa and Anbar governorat­es, the UN envoy said.

“Although large-scale military operations against ISIL will hopefully conclude by the end of this year, the security environmen­t will remain volatile and will be characteri­zed by continued cowardly terrorist attacks by DAESH, targeting civilians in many parts of the country,” he said.

“Whenever given the opportunit­y, DAESH, al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups will likely seek to tap into and deepen sectarian, tribal or ethnic divides, including by cooperatin­g with criminal gangs,” Kubis added.

To deal with these challenges, he said a long-term, comprehens­ive reform of the security sector “is imperative” Kubis said a dual focus must be maintained on the immediate challenges of defeating IS extremists and on preparing for the liberation, stabilizat­ion and rehabilita­tion of Iraq.

Continuing substantia­l internatio­nal support for Iraq “is indispensa­ble in the forthcomin­g period” to facilitate the return home of tens of thousands of people who fled the fighting to liberated areas in conditions of security and law and order, he said.

In addition, he said, “the imminent defeat of DAESH provides an urgent impetus to address the concerns of minorities ... (who) continue to face existentia­l challenges and need special attention” so they can return home.

Kubis expressed continuing concern at the delay in returning displaced residents to areas liberated long ago and at many hundreds of alleged disappeara­nces that remain unresolved, saying these and other issues can undermine efforts toward national reconcilia­tion and a political settlement in Iraq.

Iraqi military engineers installed a new floating bridge across the Tigris river on Wednesday, reconnecti­ng the two halves of Mosul to facilitate troop deployment­s ahead of a final assault to

dislodge Islamic State.

All five bridges connecting the two sides of the city bisected by the Tigris were struck by the US-led coalition in order to hinder the militants’ movements in the early stages of the campaign to retake Mosul last year.

Seven months on, Iraqi forces have removed Islamic State from all but a pocket of territory in the western half of Mosul, including the Old City, where the militants are expected to make their last stand.

 ??  ?? US President Donald Trump (left), meets with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas on May 23, in the West Bank
city of Bethlehem. (AP)
US President Donald Trump (left), meets with Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas on May 23, in the West Bank city of Bethlehem. (AP)

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