Philippine Daily Inquirer

Airstrikes kill Mosul civilians

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NEAR MOSUL— Airstrikes have killed dozens of civilians in west Mosul in recent days, officials said on Saturday, as the number of people fleeing fighting against jihadists in the area topped 200,000.

Hundreds of thousands more are still in danger inside the city, where Iraqi forces have recaptured a series of neighborho­ods since the operation to retake west Mosul from the Islamic State (IS) group began last month.

Both Iraqi aircraft and those from an internatio­nal US-led coalition are carrying out strikes against IS in the Mosul area.

The coalition said it struck an area in west Mosul on March 17 in which civilian casualties were reported, and that it was investigat­ing “to determine the facts surroundin­g this strike and the validity of the allegation of civilian casualties.”

But some Iraqi officials re- ferred to more than one day of strikes.

“There are dozens of bodies still under the rubble,” Bashar al-Kiki, the head of the Nineveh provincial council, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

“Efforts to remove the bodies ... are ongoing,” he added.

Nawfal Hammadi, the governor of Nineveh province of which Mosul is the capital, said the coalition was responsibl­e for the strikes in the city’s Mosul al-Jadida area.

Hammadi had put the toll at “more than 130 civilians” killed, but later referred to “the burial of hundreds of martyrs under the rubble of the houses in the Mosul al-Jadida area.”

“The Daesh terrorist organizati­on is seeking to stop the advance of the Iraqi forces in Mosul at any cost, and it is gathering civilians ... and using them as human shields,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

Other officials also said that hundreds of people had been killed. It was not possible to confirm the tolls independen­tly.

Omar Mohanned Sumayr and his uncle Manhal, both of whom have now fled Mosul, said that a building with 170 people inside next to their own house had been destroyed when IS forces in the area were targeted from the air.

“The house fell on the heads of the families,” Sumayr said, adding that all 170 people inside were killed.

He said IS fighters and an explosives-rigged vehicle were targeted, while Manhal said IS sniping had prompted the strike.

“Daesh snipers went up on the houses and opened fire on the Iraqi forces,” after which a plane targeted them with a missile, Manhal said.

An Iraqi brigadier general said the bombing had damaged more than 27 residentia­l buildings and that three were completely destroyed.

The officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the strikes came after IS targeted military aircraft and attacked Iraqi forces with sniper fire.

The US-led coalition against IS, which has been bombing the jihadists for more than two and a half years, said on Saturday that it had struck a location in west Mosul where civilians were reportedly killed.

“An initial review of strike data indicate that, at the request of the Iraqi security forces, the (IS) coalition struck fighters and equipment, March 17, in west Mosul at the location correspond­ing to allegation­s of civilian casualties,” it said in a statement.

At the beginning of this month it had said that “it is more likely than not, at least 220 civilians have been unintentio­nally killed by coalition strikes,” while other incidents were still under investigat­ion.

 ?? —AFP ?? Displaced Iraqis from Mosul walk toward refugee camps on March 24, fleeing their city during airstrikes on IS targets.
—AFP Displaced Iraqis from Mosul walk toward refugee camps on March 24, fleeing their city during airstrikes on IS targets.

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