Iraqi forces start push into Mosul’s Old City

Staff Lt Gen Abdulwahab Al Saadi, a senior commander with the Counter Terrorism Service, confirmed the "start of the assault on the Old City".

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MOSUL // Iraqi forces on Sunday launched an assault to retake Mosul’s Old City and push ISIL out, three years after the extremists seized the city.

"The army, counter-terrorism forces and federal police launched an attack on the Old City," Staff Lt Gen Abdulamir Yarallah said.

Staff Lt Gen Abdulwahab Al Saadi, a senior commander with the Counter Terrorism Service, confirmed the "start of the assault on the Old City".

Iraqi forces backed by air strikes from a US-led coalition are pressing an offensive to retake the Old City on the west side of the city from the extremists.

"The initial air strikes started at around midnight. The security forces started storming parts of the Old City at dawn," an officer with Nineveh operations command said.

Machine-gun fire crackled and plumes of smoke from missiles rose above the Old City.

But across the Tigris river, on Mosul’s east bank, life went on almost as usual as shoppers, students and workers pushed through traffic jams.

Taking back the Old City, a densely populated warren of narrow alleyways on the western side of Mosul, is crucial to recapturing the whole city from ISIL.

Iraqi forces launched the battle for Mosul in October, retaking the eastern part of the city in January and starting the operation for its western part the next month.

The United Nations said Friday that ISIL may be holding more than 100,000 civilians as human shields in the Old City.

The UN refugee agency’s representative in Iraq Bruno Geddo said ISIL had been capturing civilians and forcing them into the Old City.

"More than 100,000 civilians may still be held in the Old City," Mr Geddo said in Geneva.

"We know that ISIS moved them with them as they left ... locations where the fighting was going on," he said.

"These civilians are basically held as human shields in the Old City."

With almost no food, water or electricity left in the area, the civilians are "living in an increasingly worsening situation of penury and panic", he said.

"They are surrounded by fighting on every side."

Since the battle to retake Mosul began nine months ago, an estimated 862,000 people have been displaced from the city, although 195,000 have since returned, mainly to the liberated east.