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MOSUL, IRAQ: The Iraqi army, buoyed by their victory this month in liberating the eastern half of Mosul from Daesh militants, is now pushing into Daesh-held villages north of the city, an Iraqi officer overseeing the operation said Thursday.

Lt. Col. Diya Lafta said troops from his 9th Division began advancing toward two villages just north of Mosul in the morning and “after a few hours they were liberated” from Daesh militants.

By afternoon, the village of Shereikhan had been largely freed of Daesh but fighting continued in the villages beyond, according to Associated Press reporters at the scene.

Thursday’s military operation forced hundreds of civilians to flee. Families escaping the clashes on foot clogged the road leading into Mosul as a cloud of smoke from an Daesh suicide bombing rose above the horizon.

According to one fleeing resident, who asked to only be identified by his nickname Abu Sajjad for fears for his own safety, said Daesh fighters still firmly controll a number of other villages along Mosul’s northern edge.

The push came after Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi earlier this week declared Mosul’s eastern half to be completely free of Daesh.

Iraqi forces launched the massive operation to retake Mosul in October. A US-led coalition and Iraq’s own air force have been carrying out airstrikes in support of the military offensive but the troops’ advance has been painstakingly slow, in part to spare the lives of civilians trapped by the fighting and also because of heavy Daesh resistance.

In a statement Tuesday, Al-Abadi hailed the “unmatched heroism of all security forces factions” and public support for the operation.

Daesh still firmly controls Mosul’s west, where the next phase of the fighting is expected to be much more difficult. The UN estimates that some 750,000 civilians are trapped in Mosul’s western sector under Daesh rule.

Mosul — Iraq’s second-largest city and the Daesh group’s last urban stronghold in the country — fell to Daesh in the summer of 2014, when the militant group captures large swaths of northern and western Iraq.
 
http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...r-chemical-agent-in-Mosul/article17109685.ece
Officials have repeatedly warned of Islamic State’s efforts to develop chemical weapons
Iraqi forces discovered a mustard chemical warfare agent in eastern Mosul alongside a cache of Russian surface-to-surface missiles, an Iraqi officer said on Saturday.

Iraqi and U.S. officials have repeatedly warned of Islamic State (IS) group’s efforts to develop chemical weapons. When Iraqi forces retook Mosul University earlier this month, they found chemistry labs they believed had been converted into makeshift chemical weapons labs.

Iraqi special forces Brig. Gen. Haider Fadhil said French officials tested the Mosul chemical this week and confirmed it was a mustard agent.

The number of casualties due to IS chemical weapons is a small fraction compared to the hundreds of civilians killed in car and suicide bombings carried out by the group.

Experts say that is largely due to the low grade of the weapons and the group’s lack of access to efficient delivery systems.

The types of rockets found at the site suggest the IS was attempting to weaponise the chemical agent, Brig. Gen. Fadhil said. — AP
 
The big fight for the Iraqi city of Mosul is yet another case of ISIS losing the ground it seized in its blitz across Iraq and Syria in 2014.
Some buildings feature tunnels, for fighters to move into and out of positions. This was found in Sinjar, Iraq

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This heavily-armored suicide car bomb was seized by Iraqi soldiers in Mosul earlier this week.
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While this ISIS tank, along with other ordnance, was captured in November.
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There seems to be no shortage of ammo. ISIS stacked these rocket-propelled grenades at a school in Fallujah.
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They also left behind explosives ...

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Valuable intelligence can be gleaned from documents the group's fighters leave behind, like this book found in Fallujah.
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These Russian passports were found in Mosul.
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This is a marriage certificate issued by the Islamic State.
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Besides the wide variety of ammo and weaponry found abandoned ...
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rooms dedicated to making powerful bombs ...
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Iraqi and US forces have found drones that ISIS uses to drop explosives.
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US military statements on the Iraqi fight against IS in Mosul.


"It's the hardest door-to-door fighting the world has seen in recent history"
- Combined Joint Forces Ground Component Commander Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin

https://www.defense.gov/News/Article...commander-says


"It's a monumental achievement, one that would have been a difficult task for any army in the world."
- Combined Joint Forces Ground Component Commander Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin

https://www.defense.gov/News/Article...commander-says


"Ousting the group would be a challenge for any of the world's militaries."
- Joint task force commander Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/01/24/mi...ays/index.html


"Imagine a city that is about 1.2 million people, 200 000 houses and several thousands kilometers of streets, where they had the opportunity to prepare for their defense in that urban environment for over two years. And so, what makes that fight difficult and complex is that it's an urban environment, it's something that we have not done in the US army to the level and magnitude the Iraqis are doing right now."
- Combined Joint Forces Ground Component Commander Maj. Gen. Joseph Martin

https://www.mikeykay.com/copy-of-reels
 
Jihadist rule in Mosul sparked backlash against religion

Wilson Fache
AFPJanuary 30, 2017
  • 9b2ab6a1009b0e7c9d454f8d28f259d1da70c375.jpg
  • Imam Mohammed Ghanem was forbidden to conduct Friday prayers under Islamic State rule because he refused to pledge allegiance to the group
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  • Iraqi men pray outside a mosque in Mosul's al-Masarif neighbourhood
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  • A children's nursery in eastern Mosul with the faces of girls and animals painted over by Islamic State group fighters

Mosul (Iraq) (AFP) - In recaptured areas of Mosul, the extreme interpretation of Islam that jihadists forced on the local population for more than two years has sparked a backlash against religious observance.

After the Islamic State group seized the city in June 2014, it made prayers compulsory for people who were outside their homes, banned smoking, mandated beards for men and veils for women, smashed artefacts it said were idolatrous, publicly executed homosexuals and cut off the hands of thieves.

The jihadists cast their efforts as enacting the true interpretation of Islam -- an assertion that most Muslims reject -- but for some people, rather than making them more religious as intended, IS extremism had the opposite effect.

The call to prayer sounds over a mosque's loudspeakers in a recaptured area of Mosul, but a butcher named Omar continues working -- something that would have been impossible under IS rule.

"Mosul is an Islamic city and most young people used to pray," but IS was "forcing us... we had to go to the mosque against our will", he said.

Before eastern Mosul was retaken from IS during the massive operation to recapture the northern city that was launched on October 17, shops had to close five times a day for prayers.

"One day, the boy who works with me received 35 lashes because he hadn't been praying," Omar said.

"Now, we are no longer obliged to close our stores... Whether we pray or not, the decision is ours."

Imam Mohammed Ghanem, who was forbidden to conduct Friday prayers under IS rule because he refused to pledge allegiance to the group, said the jihadists sparked a backlash against religion.

"Now some people hate the time of prayer because IS forced them" to pray, Ghanem said.

- 'Too much pressure' -

"They reject these rules because they associate them with IS, even if they are in fact true Islamic precepts," he said.

"Put too much pressure on something and it will explode. This is what's happening now with the people: they want to live the way they want," he said.

According to Ghanem, part of his work before IS seized Mosul was educating people about Islamic practices and correcting them if necessary.

"Now, we say nothing because they reject religious authority. If we tell them they are doing something wrong, they tell us that we are from IS," he said.

In another area of eastern Mosul, where rain is accumulating in craters left by the fighting, Imam Fares Adel said he too has changed the way he interacts with the faithful.

"Now we are afraid to give advice to people because they feel uncomfortable with the religious clothing" worn by imams, said Adel.

The imam said he understands those residents who "reject Islam", but thinks the situation will "gradually" return to normal.

"The number of people is gradually increasing and they will all come back once of the footprint of IS has disappeared," said Adel.

In Ghanem's mosque, latecomers have to pray outside.

Around 40 worshippers kneel near fruit and vegetable stands to pray, while hundreds are squeezed inside the mosque.

"The imam has a good mentality and he speaks well to us. More and more people are coming back" to the mosque, said 25-year-old resident Mohammed Ali.

Now, without the threat of IS reprisals, "they come because they choose to".
 
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An Iraqi special forces Counter Terrorism Service (CTS) member shoots at a drone flown by Islamic State group jihadists (IS) in Mosul's al-Rifaq neighbourhood on January 8. (Photo: AFP)

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/worl...ns-mosul-police-plans-for-isis-free-iraq.html
Basmaya, Iraq: The US-led coalition is planning for the day when Iraq will be free of the Islamic State group, ramping up training of a future Mosul police force - even as the battle for the rest of the city is briefly on hold.

Sometime during the lull, significant numbers of the security forces are expected to move into villages scattered across on the plains of Ninevah province around Mosul and also into parts of the city retaken from IS over the past three months.


The Iraqi military declared Mosul's eastern half "fully liberated" in January and is now preparing to battle for the city's western sector - likely to be a much tougher fight in a dense and overcrowded urban environment. The operation to free Iraq's second-largest city has been the most complex challenge for Iraqi forces to date.

With more than 100,000 soldiers, police, tribal and militia fighters deployed for the offensive, Iraqi leaders are aware that after IS militants are routed from Mosul, a well-trained police force will be needed on the ground - to keep the hard-won victory.

In the blistery winter wind, a few hundred police recruits shuffled in place to keep warm during a recent training exercise at a coalition base run by the Spanish Army in Basmaya, east of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

The young men, mostly in their twenties and thirties, have had no previous training or experience. Many carried dilapidated Kalashnikov-style rifles, slung over their shoulders with rope or rubber-coated wire.

"We start our program at a very basic level," said Spanish Army's First Lt. Carlos Egido, who works as a trainer with the U.S.-led coalition. "When they arrive, they don't have any skills."

Ninevah's police force - along with Iraq's military - largely evaporated when IS first pushed into the province from neighboring Syria in the summer of 2014. Since then, the U.S.-led coalition has largely focused on building up combat forces for the Mosul operation.

But after the operation, a "well-trained police force will be key to Iraq's long-term security," said Spanish Army Brig. Gen. Angel Castilla, who oversees the police training.

For now, the training lasts only five weeks, which Castilla said is inadequate in the long term but forced by the condensed timetable.

"We hope they will return to be retrained," he added, explaining that the objective is to rebuild the province's police force within months.

Watching the training at Basmaya, Nineveh police officer Lt. Col. Hassan Omar Abdullah said the recruits made him feel hopeful despite their lack of experience.

Abdullah was in Mosul the day IS overran the city and fled as he saw other officers and units around him do the same. The old police force was corrupt, which is in part why Mosul fell to IS so easily, he said.

He warned that IS will likely remain a threat for a long time ahead in Iraq, so having a well-trained police force is critical.

"This will be the biggest challenge," he said.
 
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Iraqi security forces walk near corpses of ISIS militants killed in clashes in Mosul, Iraq, February 6, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmed Saad

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An Iraqi soldier carries his weapon near corpses of ISIS militants killed in clashes in Mosul, Iraq, February 6, 2017. REUTERS/Ahmed Saad
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IRAQ



An injured protester is assisted after reacting to tear gas fired by security forces as protesters run during a demonstration against corruption by followers of Iraq's influential Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr in Tahrir square, Baghdad, Iraq on Saturday. | Photo Credit: AP

http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...ter-protests-turn-violent/article17290727.ece

Two rockets landed in Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone on Saturday night following clashes at anti-government protests that left five dead, according to Iraqi security and hospital officials.

The rocket attack left no casualties as the munitions landed on the parade grounds in the centre of the highly fortified Baghdad compound that is home to Iraq’s government and most foreign embassies. It was not immediately clear who fired the projectiles.

Saturday’s protests were called for by influential cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and clashes that erupted as crowds pushed toward the Green Zone left two policeman and three protesters dead, according to police and hospital officials.

The officials said six other policemen were injured along with dozens of protesters. The violent outbreak prompted the government to call for a “full investigation”.

The demonstrators loyal to Mr. al-Sadr gathered in Baghdad’s downtown Tahrir square demanded an overhaul of the commission overseeing local elections scheduled this year. Mr. Al-Sadr has accused the commission of being riddled with corruption and has called for its overhaul.

Shots rang out in central Baghdad as security forces used live fire and tear gas to disperse the crowds. An Associated Press team at the scene witnessed ambulances rushing away protesters suffering from breathing difficulties.

While at times the crowds advanced toward Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone, by afternoon they began to disperse after a statement from Mr. al-Sadr’s office called on his followers to refrain from trying to enter the compound.

Meanwhile, Iraq’s Prime Minister ordered an investigation into the violence.

“The Prime Minister ordered a full investigation into the injuries among security forces and protesters during the demonstration today in Tahrir square,” read a statement from Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s office Saturday evening.

Mr. Al-Sadr’s office issued another statement on Saturday night following news of protester casualties claiming that “excessive force” was used against the demonstrators and threatened greater protests. “The next time the blood of our martyrs will not go in vain,” the statement read.

“We will not give in to threats,” said the head of the electoral commission, Serbat Mustafa, in an interview with a local Iraqi television channel Saturday afternoon. Mr. Mustafa said he would not offer his resignation and accused Mr. al-Sadr of using the commission as a political “scapegoat.”

Mr. Al-Sadr has been a vocal critic of Mr. al-Abadi, and last year protests that included many of his followers breached the highly fortified Green Zone twice.

Attention in Iraq is generally focused on the war against the Islamic State group, with Iraqi forces currently fighting the militants in Mosul, but Mr. al-Abadi is also facing a serious power struggle in Baghdad. A deepening economic crisis and persistent insurgent attacks in the Iraqi capital have fueled support for powerful political opponents of Mr. al-Abadi like Mr. al-Sadr.

Al-Abadi has said that he respects the rights of all Iraqis to peacefully demonstrate but called on the protesters Saturday to obey the law and respect public and private property.

The Green Zone is home to most of Iraq’s foreign embassies and is the seat of the Iraqi government.
 
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http://aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/3-killed-8-injured-in-baghdad-car-bombing/750139

By Amer al-Hassani

BAGHDAD

At least three people were killed on Tuesday when a car-bomb shook southern Baghdad, according to a local police source.

The bomb, which also left eight people injured, went off in an industrial part of the capital’s southern Bayaa neighborhood, Baghdad Police Captain Nazhan al-Khedr told Anadolu Agency.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s deadly attack.

In recent months, devastating bombings -- often featuring explosive-laden vehicles -- have become commonplace in Iraq’s violence-prone capital.

The Iraqi authorities typically blame such attacks, which frequently target civilian areas, on the Daesh terrorist group, which captured large swathes of territory in northern and western Iraq in 2014.
 
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another terroist arrested who wanted to be a women . . I hope Iraqi guyz turn him into a real women by medical surgery. And rape him forever
 
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http://www.businessinsider.com/r-ir...ncing-toward-west-mosul-from-the-south-2017-2

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi forces captured several villages on Sunday, as they advanced from the south toward the western side of Mosul that is still under control of Islamic State, Iraqi military said.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi earlier on Sunday announced the formal start of the ground offensive on western Mosul, asking the Iraqi forces to ''respect human rights'' during the battle.

The Islamic State militants are essentially under siege in western Mosul, along with an estimated 650,000 civilians, after U.S.-backed forces surrounding the city forced them from the east in the first phase of an offensive that concluded last month.


“Mosul would be a tough fight for any army in the world,” the commander of the U.S.-led coalitions forces, Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, said in a statement.


Iraqi planes dropped millions of leaflets on the western side of Mosul warning residents that the battle to dislodge Islamic State was imminent as troops began moving in their direction, the Iraqi Defence Ministry said on Saturday.

(Reporting by Maher Chmaytelli. Editing by Jane Merriman)

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1056451/middle-east
BAGHDAD: The US-led military coalition on Saturday said its forces destroyed a building in the main medical complex of western Mosul, suspected to house a Daesh command center.

The militant group disputed the assertion, saying in an online statement that Friday’s strike killed 18 people, mostly women and children, and wounded 47.

Independent media have no access to western Mosul or other areas under Daesh control in Iraq and Syria.
The militants are essentially under siege in western Mosul, along with an estimated 650,000 civilians, after US-backed forces surrounding the city dislodged them from the east in the first phase of an offensive that concluded last month.

The coalition accused Daesh of using the five-story building as a military command and control facility.
“The coalition was able to determine through intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance efforts that Daesh did not use the building for any medical purposes and that civilians were no longer accessing the site,” a coalition statement said.

The strike followed reports that the militants are dug in among civilians on the western side of Mosul and storing weapons in hospitals, schools, mosques and churches as a tactic to avoid targeting.
Iraqi forces, after capturing the east in January, have been gearing up for a final assault on the western part of Mosul that officials say could come at any time.

In past weeks, people have been slipping out of the western sector, saying a mix of poverty and low food stocks meant that getting food had become a serious problem.

Umm Mohammed decided to flee western Mosul after her husband told her the alternative was that they starve.
Their family — six boys and a girl — had been eating little for the last three months as money ran out and supplies became harder to get a hold of in the half of the northern Iraqi city that is still under the rule of Daesh.
“People were eating whatever they had, water with bread, or water with tomato paste,” said Umm Mohammed. Her kids sometimes went to bed without even that. She and her family made it to eastern Mosul, then to a camp for displaced people outside the city.

She spoke on condition she be identified by her traditional honorific because she feared for the safety of relatives still in western Mosul.

The UN estimates that up to 750,000 civilians may be left in the western half of the city. Aid agencies have no access and all the commercial arteries have been blocked. Since the beginning of the year, around 140 families — some 600 people — have made it out of the west to the camps of displaced, according to the UN.
The militants have been trying to prevent residents from leaving.

Dafr Mohammed, a 24-year-old farmer from Baddoush, a town on the northern outskirts of the city, said he arranged a boat to cross the Tigris River to the eastern side but was caught by the militants. He was only able to get out because he convinced them his wife was sick and needed a doctor — and because he left other relatives back in the west, which they took as a guarantee.

“Most nights we went to bed hungry, including the two kids,” said Mohammed.

He said the problem was not so much the lack of food but that people had no more money to pay for it. “Daesh took all the wheat and barley we harvested this year without payment so we did not have any money,” he said.
Prices in western Mosul have skyrocketed, especially after the road to Syria was blocked late last year, because no more food was coming in, those who escaped said. A 50 kg sack of rice rose to 120,000 dinars ($95), from 19,000 ($15). A sack of flour, once 1,000 dinars ($.80), is now 7,000 ($6).

Abdul-Rahman Aouf Aziz, a 24-year-old who fled in January, said he had got out because he could not handle it anymore and was prepared to risk his life in the escape.

“There was no life left there. It had become very hard,” he said.
 
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