A commander said Friday that Iraqi forces have gained ground from jihadists inside the Old City of Mosul, an area that could see some of the toughest fighting of the battle for the northern metropolis.
Iraqi forces launched an operation on February 19 to retake the west side of Mosul — the most populous area still held by the Islamic State group — and have retaken several neighbourhoods.
But the pace of their advance has periodically slowed because of bad weather that has hampered air support.
The Old City, where hundreds of thousands of civilians are believed to have stayed on under IS rule, is a warren of narrow streets that restricts the use of large armoured vehicles.
"Federal police and Rapid Response units imposed their complete control over the Al-Basha Mosque… and the Bab al-Saray market in the Old City," federal police Lieutenant General Raed Shakir Jawdat, the commander of the federal police, said in a statement.
Iraqi forces launched the operation to recapture Mosul — the jihadists' last major urban bastion in the country — in October, retaking its east side before setting their sites on the smaller but more densely populated west.
Adopting IS tactic, Iraqi forces weaponise small drones
Inside an armoured vehicle in Mosul, a colonel scans live footage from a drone flying above the Iraqi city, hunting targets for a new weapon deployed against jihadists.
The Islamic State group has used small commercial drones to drop explosives on advancing Iraqi forces since they launched the offensive to retake Iraq's second city in October.
As the battle now focuses on recapturing wes … read more