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Up to 900 extremists killed in Mosul battle — US

By AFP - Oct 27,2016 - Last updated at Oct 27,2016

An Iraqi family sits in a vehicle near Sin Al Dhuban village, some 40km south of Mosul, after they fled the Hammam Al Alil area on Thursday, as government forces take part in an operation to retake the main hub city from Daesh militants (AFP photo)

ERBIL — The United States said Thursday up to 900 Daesh extremists have been killed in the offensive to retake Iraq's Mosul, as camps around the city filled with fleeing civilians.

Iraqis who fled their homes expressed joy at escaping Daesh's brutal rule as they were given shelter and assistance, in some cases reuniting with relatives they had not seen in more than two years.

The offensive, launched on October 17, is seeing tens of thousands of Iraqi fighters advancing on Mosul from the south, east and north in a bid to retake the last major Iraqi city under Daesh control.

Backed with air and ground support from a US-led coalition, federal forces allied with Kurdish peshmerga fighters have taken a string of towns and villages in a cautious but steady advance.

General Joseph Votel, who heads the US military’s Central Command, told AFP the offensive was inflicting a heavy toll on the extremists.

“Just in the operations over the last week and a half associated with Mosul, we estimate they’ve probably killed about 800-900 Daesh fighters,” Votel said in an interview.

There are between 3,500 and 5,000 Daesh extremists in Mosul and up to another 2,000 in the broader area, according to US estimates.

Votel also said he had spoken with Iraqi military leaders late Tuesday who told him that as of that time, 57 members of the Iraqi security forces had been killed and another 255 or so wounded.

For the Kurdish regional peshmerga forces, numbers were lower, with about 30 killed and between 70 and 100 wounded.

Families reunited 

 

The offensive has so far been concentrated in towns and villages around Mosul, with Iraqi forces later expected to breach city limits and engage the militants in street-to-street fighting.

Aid workers have warned of a major humanitarian crisis when fighting begins in earnest for Mosul, which is home to more than a million people, but thousands have already been fleeing surrounding areas.

Iraq’s ministry of displacement and migration said on Thursday that more than 11,700 people had been displaced since the operation began.

“There’s been quite a dramatic upturn in the last few days. As the Iraqi troops get closer to Mosul, more people are getting displaced, there are more populated areas,” said Karl Schembri, regional media adviser for the Norwegian Refugee Council.

At a camp in Khazir, about mid-way between Mosul and the Iraqi Kurdish capital Erbil, Massud Ismail Hassan peered through a chainlink fence, looking for family members as peshmerga fighters registered the displaced.

“Once all these procedures are finished we will be able to give them food and drink and blankets we brought with us,” he said.

Other families had already found each other, and tearful relatives clutched hands through the links of the fence.

Saddam Dahham, who lived under Daesh control in a village near Mosul for more than two years, fled to Khazir with his wife and their three children.

“We were not allowed to smoke, to use phones, not allowed to watch TV and we had to let our beards grow long,” the 36-year-old said.

Not enough room
at camps 

 

One of the first things he did after arriving at the camp was joyfully shave the “heavy thing dangling from my chin,” Dahham said.

“I’m finally going to resume a normal life,” the former truck driver said.

Schembri said the Norwegian Refugee Council, other aid agencies and the United Nations were planning for 200,000 people to be displaced in the next few days, though it may not reach that figure.

If anything close to 200,000 people are displaced in the immediate future, there would be a major shortage of places in camps.

“In terms of... camp facilities, there are only spaces available for 60,000” people, Schembri said.

After seizing control of large parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria in mid-2014, Daesh declared a cross-border “caliphate”, imposed its harsh interpretation of Islamic law and committed widespread atrocities.

Its rule was especially harsh for religious minorities.

On Thursday two Yazidi women activists who survived a nightmare ordeal at the hands of Daesh won the European Parliament’s prestigious Sakharov human rights prize.

Nadia Murad and Lamia Haji Bashar have become figureheads for the effort to protect the Yazidis, against whom Daesh pursued a brutal campaign of massacres as well as enslavement and rape.

 

Murad hailed the prize as a “profound message to the [Daseh] terrorist group that their criminal inhumanity is condemned and their victims are honored by the free world”.

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