Western Mail

Iraqi PM declares ‘total victory’ over IS in Mosul

- Press Associatio­n Reporters newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

IRAQI Prime Minister Haider alAbadi has declared victory over the Islamic State in Mosul. “We announce the total victory for Iraq and all Iraqis,” Mr al-Abadi said, speaking from a small base in western Mosul on the edge of the Old City, where the last pockets of resistance had been holding out.

“This great feast day crowned the victories of the fighters and the Iraqis for the past three years,” he said.

Hours earlier, air strikes pounded the last IS-held territory on the western edge of the Tigris River. In recent days, Iraqi troops, closely backed by air strikes from the US-led coalition, confined the remaining few hundred extremists in an area measuring less than a mile.

Shortly after Mr al-Abadi’s speech, the coalition congratula­ted him on the victory against “a brutal and evil enemy,” according to a statement.

“While there are still areas of the Old City of Mosul that must be backcleare­d of explosive devices and possible ISIS fighters in hiding, the ISF have Mosul now firmly under their control,” the statement added.

Mr Al-Abadi was in Mosul on Sunday, congratula­ting Iraqi soldiers on recent gains but stopping short of declaring an outright victory.

The battle for Mosul was Iraq’s longest and most punishing convention­al fight against IS in the more than three-year war against the extremists.

Launched in October, the massive operation comprised more than 70,000 Iraqi troops drawn from the country’s army, special forces, police, tribal fighters and mostly Shiite paramilita­ry forces.

Over the course of the campaign, Iraq’s special forces units who largely led the assault have faced casualty rates of 40%, according to a report in May from the office of the US secretary of defence.

Additional­ly, thousands of civilians were estimated to have been killed, according to Nineveh’s provincial council. That did not include those still believed buried under collapsed buildings.

The fight also displaced more than 897,000 people, and the United Nations said there was no end in sight to the humanitari­an crisis in Iraq despite the conclusion of the fight.

The UN said thousands of Mosul residents will likely remain displaced from the city after the fight is concluded because of “extensive damage caused during the conflict”.

The battle has also decimated Mosul’s infrastruc­ture in its western half, where fighting was fiercest. Iraq’s civil defence rescue teams – a branch of the Interior Ministry – said about 65% of the buildings in the Old City, many dating back centuries, were severely damaged or destroyed.

In western neighbourh­oods like Zanjili, destructio­n was estimated to be 70% of all houses, buildings and infrastruc­ture.

Mosul fell to IS militants within a matter of days in June 2014, starting a political and security crisis not seen in the country since the 2003 toppling of Saddam Hussein.

The territoria­l gains by the extremists led to the ousting of Iraq’s top leaders, dramatical­ly shifted the balance of power among its security forces, empowered Iranian-backed fighters who are now sanctioned by the central government, and brought US ground troops back on to Iraqi soil for the first time since 2011.

The road to retake Mosul has taken the government, its security forces and the coalition more than three years of training troops to replace the tens of thousands of Iraqi forces who dissolved in the face of the 2014 IS advance.

 ?? Rowan Griffiths ?? > Streets in the Old City, western Mosul, where the Iraqi ‘Golden Division’ special forces units have engaged IS fighters
Rowan Griffiths > Streets in the Old City, western Mosul, where the Iraqi ‘Golden Division’ special forces units have engaged IS fighters

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