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Forces battle their way towards Mosul airport

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GROUND OFFENSIVE: US-backed Iraqi forces want to turn airport into support base -


SOUTH OF MOSUL/BAGHDAD: US-backed Iraqi forces fought IS fighters on Monday to clear the way to Mosul’s airport, on the second day of a ground offensive on the fighters’ remaining stronghold in the western side of the city.


Federal police and elite interior ministry units known as Rapid Response are leading the charge towards the airport, located on the southern limit of the Mosul, trying to dislodge the militants from a nearby hill known as Albu Saif.


The Iraqi forces plan is to turn the airport into a close support base for the onslaught into western Mosul itself.


State militants are essentially under siege in western Mosul, along with an estimated 650,000 civilians, after they were forced out of the eastern part of the city in the first phase of an offensive that concluded last month, after 100 days of fighting.


“They are striking and engaging our forces and pulling back towards Mosul,” Major Mortada Ali Abd of the Rapid Response units told a Reuters correspondent south of Mosul. “God willing Albu Saif will be fully liberated today.” Helicopters were strafing the Albu Saif hill to clear it of snipers, while machine gun fire and rocket propelled grenades could be heard.


The advancing forces also disabled a car bomb — used by the militants to obstruct attacking forces.


The Iraqi forces have been advancing so far in sparsely populated areas. The fighting will get tougher as they get nearer to the city itself and the risk greater for the civilians.


Up to 400,000 civilians could be displaced by the offensive as residents of western Mosul suffer food and fuel shortages and markets are closed, United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq Lise Grande told Reuters on Saturday.


Commanders expect the battle to be more difficult than in the east of the city, which Iraqi forces took control of last month after three months of fighting, because tanks and armoured vehicles cannot pass through its narrow alleyways.


The militants have developed a network of passageways and tunnels to enable them to hide and fight among civilians, disappear after hit-and-run operations and track government troop movements, according to residents.


Western Mosul contains the old city centre, with its ancient souqs, government administrative buildings, and the mosque from which State leader Abu Bakr al Baghdadi declared his self-styled caliphate over parts of Syria and Iraq in 2014. — Reuters


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