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Iraqi forces launch assault on Mosul Old City

By AFP - Jun 19,2017 - Last updated at Jun 19,2017

Iraqi forces gesture during their advance towards Mosul’s Old City on Sunday, during the ongoing offensive by Iraqi forces to retake the last district still held by the Daesh group (AFP photo)

MOSUL, Iraq —  Iraqi forces launched an assault Sunday to retake Mosul’s Old City, the last district still held by the Daesh terror group three years after the extremists seized the northern city and declared their “caliphate”.

Military commanders told AFP the assault had begun at dawn after overnight air strikes by the US-led coalition backing Iraqi forces. They said the extremists were putting up fierce resistance.

The push into Mosul’s Old City — a densely populated warren of narrow alleyways on the western side of Iraq’s second city — marks the culmination of a months-long campaign by Iraqi forces to retake Daesh’s last major urban stronghold in the country.

The loss of Mosul would mark the effective end of the Iraqi portion of the cross-border “caliphate” Daesh declared in the summer of 2014 after seizing large parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria.

The military announced the start of the assault in a statement, saying the army, counterterrorism forces and federal police had “launched an attack on the Old City”.

Machinegun fire crackled and plumes of smoke rose above the Old City as surrounding Iraqi positions were hit with heavy mortar fire. 

On the first floor of a building on a street lined with destroyed car repair shops, a commander holding a tablet computer feverishly called in coordinates for an air strike against a suicide car bomb approaching his position.

Staff Lieutenant General Abdulghani Al Assadi, a senior commander with the Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS), said the operation was advancing slowly “to preserve civilian lives as we breach the enemy’s defence lines”.

 

‘Last episode of Daesh show’ 

 

“Our forces have moved in on foot because the alleys are very narrow,” he said. “The strategy has changed compared to other operations. There is no room for our vehicles to manoeuvre and there are many civilians.” 

The United Nations said Friday that Daesh may be holding more than 100,000 civilians as human shields in the Old City.

Surrounded by Iraqi forces on three sides and blocked on the other by the Tigris River that runs through Mosul, the extremists had no choice but a fight to the finish, Assadi said.

“This is the last episode of the Daesh show,” he said.

“It’s our most difficult operation. Fighting is fierce because it’s their last stronghold... They have nowhere to flee.”

 He said he hoped the operation could be concluded before eid — the festival marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, expected around June 25 or 26 — “but I think it is going to take longer”.

Iraqi forces launched the battle for Mosul in October, retaking the eastern part of the city in January and starting the operation for its western part the following month.

 

‘A terrifying time’ 

 

The International Rescue Committee, a major aid group operating in Iraq, warned of the huge risks facing already-traumatised civilians.

“This will be a terrifying time for around 100,000 people still trapped in Mosul’s Old City and now at risk of getting caught up in the fierce street fighting to come,” the IRC’s acting country director Nora Love said in a statement.

“Both coalition and Iraqi forces must do everything in their power to keep civilians safe during these final stages of the battle for Mosul.”

 Since the battle to retake Mosul began, an estimated 862,000 people have been displaced from the city, although 195,000 have since returned, mainly to its eastern side.

On Sunday, only yards from Iraqi forward positions and falling mortars, civilians could be seen cleaning their homes on streets lined with rubble.

Some people appeared to have never left while others, carrying boxes of food and canvas bags stuffed with clothes, were returning to areas the security forces retook from Daesh only a few days earlier.

It was in Mosul in July 2014 that Daesh chief Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi made his only public appearance, urging Muslims worldwide to move to the group’s “caliphate” straddling Iraq and Syria.

The extremists have since lost most of the territory they once controlled in the face of US-backed offensives in Iraq and in Syria, where an alliance of Kurdish and Arab forces are advancing on their last Syrian bastion Raqqa.

It is not clear how many Daesh members remain in Mosul, where many foreign fighters have joined local extremists since the city was taken.

“The locals in Daesh will shave their beards and try to blend in with the civilians as they always do,” Assadi of the CTS said. “The foreigners will fight hard and eventually get killed.”

 The fall of Mosul was the Iraqi forces’ worst defeat in the war with Daesh. 

 

Regaining it would cap a major turnaround for security forces, who broke away and ran despite outnumbering the extremists who attacked the city in 2014.

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