Iraqi forces advance on Mosul mosque
where IS declared caliphate
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[June 21, 2017]
By Marius Bosch
MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S.-backed Iraqi
forces on Wednesday began a push towards the mosque in Mosul where
Islamic State declared a self-styled caliphate three years ago, military
officials said.
The forces had encircled the jihadist group's stronghold in the Old City
of Mosul, where the mosque is located, on Tuesday, they said.
The Counter Terrorism Service (CTS) are 200 to 300 were meters (yards)
away from the medieval Grand al-Nuri Mosque, an Iraqi military statement
said.
Major General Rupert Jones, the British deputy commander of the
international coalition fighting Islamic State, told Reuters the Iraqi
forces were about 300 meters from the mosque.
The U.S.-led coalition is providing air and ground support to the Mosul
offensive that started on Oct. 17.
The militants' leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, proclaimed himself caliph
from its pulpit after the insurgents overran parts of Iraq and Syria.
His black flag has been flying over its famous leaning minaret since
June 2014.
Iraqi officials have privately expressed the hope that the mosque could
be captured by Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of Ramadan, the
Muslim fasting month. The first day of the Eid falls this year on June
25 or 26 in Iraq.
The battle for the Old City is becoming the deadliest in the
eight-month-old offensive to capture Mosul, Islamic State's de facto
capital in Iraq.
More than 100,000 civilians, of whom half are children, are trapped in
its old fragile houses with little food, water, medicine, no electricity
and limited access to clinics.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Monday sick and
wounded civilians escaping through Islamic State lines were dying in
"high numbers".
"We are trying to keep families inside their houses and, after we secure
their block, we will evacuate them through safe routes," Lieutenant
General Abdul Ghani al-Assadi, senior CTS commander in Mosul, told Iraqi
state TV.
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A black jihadist flag hangs from Mosul's Al-Habda minaret at the
Grand Mosque, where Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
declared his caliphate back in 2014, in western Mosul, Iraq May 29,
2017. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis
The militants are moving stealthily in the Old City's maze of
alleyways and narrow streets, through holes dug between houses,
fighting back the advancing troops with sniper and mortar fire,
booby traps and suicide bombers.
They have also covered many streets with sheets of cloth to obstruct
air surveillance, making it difficult for the advancing troops to
hit them without a risk to civilians.
"We are attacking simultaneously from different fronts to fraction
them into smaller groups easier to fight," said an officer from the
Federal Police, another force taking part in the assault on the Old
City,
The Iraqi army estimates the number of Islamic State fighters at no
more than 300, down from nearly 6,000 in the city when the battle of
Mosul started on Oct. 17.
The fall of Mosul would, in effect, mark the end of the Iraqi half
of the "caliphate" even though Islamic State would continue to
control territory west and south of the city, the largest they came
to control in both Iraq and Syria.
The Iraqi government initially hoped to take Mosul by the end of
2016, but the campaign took longer as militants
reinforced positions in civilian areas to fight back.
The militants are also retreating in Syria, mainly in the face of a
U.S.-backed Kurdish-led coalition. Its capital there, Raqqa, is
under siege.
About 850,000 people, more than a third of the pre-war population of
Mosul, have fled, seeking refuge with relatives or in camps,
according to aid groups.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed in Baghdad, writing by Maher
Chmaytelli; editing by Angus MacSwan)
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