Iraq air strike kills dozens of civilians: report
Attack on area controlled by Daesh neat Syria border reportedly leaves dozens of civilians dead
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Bartalla, Iraq: An air strike in a western Iraqi town near the Syrian
border still controlled by Daesh killed and wounded dozens of civilians
on Wednesday, officials said.
The deadly strike came as Iraqi
forces battled jihadists deep inside Mosul, edging closer to the River
Tigris that divides the city and looking for a breakthrough in the
seven-week-old offensive.
The speaker of Iraq’s parliament, Salim
Al Juburi condemned the air strike “that targeted a market area for
civilians and resulted in the death and injury of dozens of them” in the
town of Al Qaim.
If confirmed, the blunder would be one of the
worst cases of civilians being killed in strikes in Iraq since the start
of the air campaign against Daesh in 2014.
Officials in Anbar,
the western province in which Al Qaim is located, said dozens were
killed in the afternoon strike, although AFP could not reach sources in
the town to confirm the casualty toll.
A spokesman for the provincial council of Anbar claimed the strike was carried out by an Iraqi aircraft in the afternoon.
“The
strike hit a market at peak hour, there were retirees queueing up pick
up their pension, people collecting salaries and social security
payments,” Eid Ammash said.
“Entire families were killed,” he said.
Another
officials blamed the strike on the US-led coalition that has carried
out thousands of air strikes against Daesh in Iraq and Syria since 2014.
There
was no immediate comment from Iraq’s Joint Operations Command
coordinating the fight against Daesh and the coalition denied carrying
out any strikes in the area at the time.
“We didn’t conduct strikes in the area at the time of the incident,” coalition spokesman Colonel John Dorrian told AFP.
Army pinned back in Mosul
Meanwhile
in east Mosul, the 9th Armoured Division had reached Al Salam hospital
in a push on Tuesday, the farthest the army had penetrated into the city
since the start of a broad offensive launched on October 17.
But
it quickly found itself surrounded by jihadists and needed support from
the elite Counter-Terrorism Service to pull back, commanders said.
“Our forces dealt with the situation at Al Salam hospital” in southeastern Mosul, Maan Saadi, a CTS commander, told AFP.
“Our
mission was to offer support to the 9th Division forces surrounded in
the hospital, our units accomplished this mission and opened a passage,”
he said.
Saadi said the army was now occupying a position nearly
one kilometre from the hospital, which a 9th Division commander said had
been used by Daesh as a command centre.
The five-storey building
towers above the neighbourhood and the jihadists had been using the
upper floors and roof as sniper positions for some time, Mosul residents
said.
The Daesh-affiliated Amaq news agency said the jihadists
had carried out five suicide car bomb attacks in the area inflicted
heavy losses on the army.
CTS has spearheaded the drive into Mosul in the past month, retaking several neighbourhoods in the east of the city.
The
army also punched into Mosul in November but its progress has been
slower and Iraqi forces barely control half of the eastern side of the
city.
Saadi said his forces had retaken two neighbourhoods in
eastern Mosul and were aiming to flush out jihadists from two more in
the coming days.
“We are now in Al Taamim which is three
kilometres from the river, including an open area of about one kilometre
where there are no buildings,” he said.
Water crisis
Forces
on the southern and northern fronts made quick early gains when Iraq
launched its largest military operation in years but progress has been
slow in recent days.
One of the main factors hampering Iraqi
forces in Mosul is the continued presence of hundreds of thousands of
civilians, who either want to stay in their homes or are prevented from
leaving by Daesh.
The United Nations on Wednesday put the overall
number of people displaced by the offensive at more than 82,000, less
than half the number the UN expected before the offensive.
It its
latest situation report, the UN spoke of spiralling civilian casualties
as Iraqi forces went house to house in east Mosul, attempting to battle
jihadists and protect civilians at the same time.
“Partners are
rushing to bring trauma care closer to the front lines to give injured
civilians the best chance of survival,” the Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs said.
It said work was also under way to
repair water and electricity infrastructure in east Mosul, where it
described the current water shortage as “critical”.
The conditions
for those massing in the camps on the city’s outskirts were hardly
better, with the onset of winter bringing freezing temperatures at
night.
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