Mosul offensive takes toll as Iraq casualties soar
Nearly 2,000 Iraqi soldiers and over 926 civilians have been killed last month alone
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Baghdad: The scope of the toll the six-week-old battle for Mosul has
taken on Iraqi forces emerged Thursday, with UN figures showing that
around 2,000 had been killed in fighting last month alone.
While
high casualty tolls were expected for what has been Iraq’s toughest
battle against Daesh to date, few figures had been released.
The
United Nations’ mission in Iraq released monthly casualty figures for
November that showed 1,959 members of the Iraqi forces were killed just
last month and 450 others wounded.
The UN toll includes members of
the army, police engaged in combat, the Kurdish peshmerga, interior
ministry forces and pro-government paramilitaries.
The UN
statement also said at least 926 civilians were killed, bringing to
2,885 the number of Iraqis killed in acts of terrorism, violence and
armed conflict last month.
“The casualty figures are staggering,
with civilians accounting for a significant number of the victims,” the
top UN envoy in Iraq, Jan Kubis, said.
The spike in casualties
comes as a major offensive to retake the Daesh stronghold of Mosul,
Iraq’s largest military operation in years, enters its seventh week.
Kubis
said the growing death toll was largely a result of Daesh’s ferocious
defence of Mosul, the city where they proclaimed their now crumbling
“caliphate” in 2014.
“Daesh has been employing the most vicious
tactics, using civilian homes as firing positions as well as abducting
and forcibly moving civilians, effectively using them as human shields,”
he said.
The US-led coalition assisting anti-IS forces in Iraq
and Syria admitted Thursday to “inadvertently” killing 54 civilians in
both countries between March and October.
“Although the coalition
makes extraordinary efforts to strike military targets in a manner that
minimises the risk of civilian casualties, in some cases casualties are
unavoidable,” the coalition said in a statement.
A July 18 strike that killed 100 Daesh fighters also killed as many as 24 civilians, the statement added.
The
UN did not provide a regional breakdown of the overall toll but its
casualty figures have been going up steadily since the launch of the
Mosul offensive on October 17.
The number of members of the Iraqi forces killed released by the UN for October was 672.
The
highest number of civilian deaths recorded in November was in Nineveh
province, of which Mosul is the capital, with 332, the UN figures
showed.
The UN explained it had few reliable figures for the
western province of Anbar, which has seen continued Daesh-related
violence in recent weeks, and suggested that real casualty figures were
likely higher.
The government in Baghdad rarely divulges casualty figures during a military operation.
Officials
from the Kurdistan region’s peshmerga ministry said more than 1,600
peshmerga fighters were killed since Daesh took over large parts of Iraq
in June 2014.
“Since the beginning of the war against Daesh,
which means June 2014, until November 30 (2016), the total number of
martyrs is 1,614 and the wounded are 9,515,” peshmerga ministry
secretary-general Jabar Yawar told AFP.
Burials at the main Shiite
cemetery of Najaf, as well as partial figures provided by local
officials across the country and the number of obituaries posted on
Facebook also pointed to significant losses among the security forces.
After
the launch of the offensive in mid-October, tens of thousands of Iraqi
forces started closing in on Mosul, retaking towns and villages in
Nineveh province.
Iraqi federal forces entered the city from the eastern side and admitted they were met by stiffer than expected resistance.
Military
officials and experts had warned before the start of the offensive that
the toughest fighting would be on the western side of the city.
The
peshmerga were mostly involved in the early phase of the offensive and
now hold positions a few miles from Mosul city limits.
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