Iraqi forces fight door-to-door in Mosul as offensive enters seventh month

A vehicle belonging to Iraqi forces drives along a street controlled by the Iraqi Federal Police in Mosul on April 14, 2017.


Iraqi forces gained fresh ground in door-to-door fighting in the Old City of Mosul, a military spokesman said on Monday, as the US-backed offensive to capture ISIS’s de facto capital in Iraq entered its seventh month.

A Reuters correspondent saw thick smoke billowing over the Old City, near the Grand al-Nuri Mosque, from where ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi announced his arrival.

Heavy exchanges of gunfire and mortar rounds could be heard from the neighbourhoods facing the old city across the Tigris river that bisects Mosul into a western and eastern sides.

The war between ISIS militants and Iraqi forces is taking a heavy toll on several hundred thousand civilians trapped inside the city, with severely malnourished babies reaching hospitals in government-held areas.

Iraqi Federal Police forces “are engaged in difficult, house-to-house clashes with ISIS fighters inside the Old City”, a media officer from these units told Reuters.

Drones are extensively being used to locate and direct air strikes on the militants who are dug in the middle of civilians, he said.

Troops have had the famous centuries-old al-Nuri Mosque leaning minaret in their sights since last month, as capturing it would mark a symbolic victory over the insurgents. A police spokesman said the troops were closing in on the mosque without indicating the remaining distance.

Their progress has been slow as about 400,000 civilians, or a quarter of Mosul’s pre-war population, are trapped in neighbourhoods still under control of the militants.

More 300,000 have fled fighting since the offensive operation started on Oct. 17, with strong air and ground support from a US-led coalition. Mosul, the largest city in northern Iraq, was captured by the ultra-hardline Sunni Muslim fighters in mid 2014.

Government forces, including army, police and elite counter terrorism units have taken back most of it, including the half that lies east of the Tigris river. The militants are now surrounded in the northwestern quarter including the historic Old City, using booby traps, sniper and mortar fire against the assailants.

Police on Sunday reported a toxic gas attack on its troops that caused no deaths. It also said the militants were increasingly using suicide motorbikes attacks. The narrow alleyways restricts the use of suicide cars by the militants and tanks, armoured personnel carriers and Humvees by the government forces.

The United Nations said last month that 12 people, including women and children, had been treated for possible exposure to chemical weapons agents in Mosul. But Iraq’s UN ambassador, Mohamed Ali Alhakim, said days later there was no evidence for that.

The fighting has killed several thousands among civilians and fighters on both sides, according to aid organisations. Residents who have managed to escape from the Old City have said there is almost nothing to eat but flour mixed with water and boiled wheat grain.

What little food remains is too expensive for most residents to afford, or kept for ISIS members and their supporters.








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