Mosul: A soldier caught in action during the Iraqi army’s ongoing operation to retake an area of this city from the militant Islamic State group.—AFP
Mosul: A soldier caught in action during the Iraqi army’s ongoing operation to retake an area of this city from the militant Islamic State group.—AFP

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s Iran-backed Shia paramilitary force said on Sunday it had dislodged the militant Islamic State group from a number of villages west of Mosul, scoring further progress towards the border with Syria.

The villages taken by the Popular Mobilisation paramilitary force include Kojo, where IS fighters abducted hundreds of Yazidi women in 2014, including Nadia Murad and Lamiya Aji Bashar, recipients of the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize for freedom of thought.

Kojo and the other villages of the Sinjar mountain region will be returned to the Yazidi community, a Popular Mobilisation leader, Abu Mahdi Al-Muhandis, told Iraqi state television. Popular Mobilisation is taking part in the US-backed Iraqi campaign to defeat IS in Mosul and the surrounding province of Nineveh. The force reports nominally to Iraq’s Shia-led government and has Iranian military advisers.

Iraq’s government is aiming to control the border area with Syria in coordination with the Iranian-backed army of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Linking up the two sides would give Assad a significant advantage in fighting the six-year rebellion against his rule.

The region immediately alongside the border on the Iraqi side is either under the control of IS or Kurdish forces. The IS group also controls parts of Syria.

Iraqi government armed forces are focusing their effort on dislodging insurgents from the city of Mosul, IS’s de-facto capital in Iraq.

Since the campaign started in October, the insurgents have lost the city except for an enclave alongside the western bank of the Tigris river.

On Saturday Iraqi forces launched an operation to capture the enclave, which includes the densely populated Old City centre and three adjacent districts.

The fall of the city would, in effect, mark the end of the Iraqi half of the “caliphate” declared nearly three years ago by Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi from Mosul.

Published in Dawn, May 29th, 2017

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