Iraqi forces in IS battle raise flag over Mosul University
BY Agencies16 Jan 2017 4:12 AM IST
Agencies16 Jan 2017 4:12 AM IST
Iraqi special forces raised the Iraqi flag above buildings within the Mosul University complex on Saturday as they battled Islamic State militants for control of the city, according to senior Iraqi officers and the US-led coalition.
The troops entered the university grounds in the morning hours and by afternoon they had taken control of a neighborhood on the northeastern edge of the university compound and the technical institute within the campus, according to special forces Brig Gen Haider Fadhil and Maj Gen Sami al-Aridi.
By evening, Iraqi forces had also taken control of the Nineveh governorate and council buildings, according to a statement from the US-led coalition.
“Work still needs to be done but ISIL’s days in Mosul are quickly coming to an end,” said US army Col. John Dorrian, a spokesman for the US-led anti-IS coalition, using an alternative acronym for the Islamic State group.
Al-Aridi, who was overseeing the assault on Saturday, said, “We broke through the terrorists’ defenses and we destroyed their lines and their units and their bases.”
The university is located in the eastern section of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city which is divided by the Tigris River into roughly an eastern and a western half.
Sgt. Saad Jabar said that over the past two years since IS seized Mosul in a 2014 blitz that captured much of northern and western Iraq, the militants have had time to prepare for an assault by Iraqi forces, building tunnels and getaways across the city, including on the university grounds.
“They had reinforced their positions and had plans. They knew where to come in and where to get out,” Jabar said.
The push into Mosul University came a day after Iraqi army forces north of the city linked up with troops pushing in from the city’s eastern edge. Iraqi forces have largely surrounded Mosul, but the most significant advances on the city have come from the eastern front and in the eastern half of the city. IS still controls Mosul’s west.
The university, founded in the 1960s, was one of the top educational institutions in Iraq, drawing students from all over the country and reflecting the city’s once diverse ethnic makeup. As the security situation in Mosul deteriorated following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, enrollments declined.
After the city fell to IS in the summer 2014, the sprawling complex was shuttered, most of the professors fled and the university was quickly converted into a base by the militants who used its medical and engineering departments.
Residents fleeing Mosul say the university had been largely destroyed by airstrikes and artillery fire.
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