World

Iraqi forces retake village as Tal Afar assault begins

August 20, 2017

BAGHDAD — Iraqi forces on Sunday launched an assault to retake the northern city of Tal Afar from Daesh (the so-called IS) group, after ousting the militants from Mosul last month.

Tal Afar lies around 70 km west of second city Mosul, which Iraqi forces recaptured in early July in a major blow to the militants.

In a televised speech early Sunday, Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi, dressed in military uniform and standing in front of an Iraqi flag and map of the country, announced "the start of an operation to free Tal Afar".

"I am saying to Daesh that there's no choice other than to leave or be killed," he said.

"We have won all our battles, and Daesh have always lost," he said, telling his troops: "The entire world is with you."

Several hours after the start of the battle, the federal police said it had retaken the village of Al-Abra Al-Sghira west of Tal Afar.

Daesh militants in June 2014 overran Tal Afar, a Shiite enclave in the predominantly Sunni province of Nineveh, on the road between Mosul and Syria.

At the time, it had a population of around 200,000. Local officials said it was impossible to know the exact number still living inside the city.

Authorities have accused the approximately 1,000 militants in the city of using civilians as human shields during Iraqi and US-led coalition airstrikes earlier this week in preparation for the ground assault.

Abadi said that Iraq's Hashed Al-Shaabi paramilitary forces would help army, police and counter-terrorism units to retake Tal Afar.

The umbrella organization, which is dominated by Iran-backed Shiite militias, has already been fighting to retake a number of other Iraqi cities from Daesh.

"In the early hours, the guns and flags turned toward their targets," said Hashed spokesman Ahmed Al-Assadi.

"Victory is near" in Tal Afar, an "Iraqi city taken hostage and humiliated for years by attacks from these barbarians," he said.

Even before the Abadi's announcement, Iraqi planes had dropped leaflets to residents in Tal Afar and its surroundings, the Hashed said in a statement.

The authorities said they had set up a radio station to keep residents informed of developments.

Daesh overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014, but Iraqi forces have since regained much of the territory.

Once Tal Afar is retaken, Iraqi authorities intend to turn their sights south to launch a fight to retake militant-held Hawijah, in the province of Kirkuk, 300 km northwest of Baghdad.

Militants still hold areas in Anbar, a western province that borders Syria and faces major security challenges.

Daesh has also suffered major setbacks in Syria, where US-backed fighters have retaken around half of its de facto Syrian capital Raqqa.

Russia-supported Syrian troops have almost entirely encircled Daesh in Syria's central desert region, and the militants are facing twin assaults from the Lebanese army and Shiite movement Hezbollah on the Lebanon-Syrian border. — AFP


August 20, 2017
30 views
HIGHLIGHTS
World
30 minutes ago

Moscow denies Ukraine's claim of shooting down Russian bomber

World
33 minutes ago

Attack sends message to Iran but Israelis divided over response

World
40 minutes ago

Polish man charged in connection with alleged Russian plot to kill Ukraine leader