Mosul: Iraq PM to celebrate victory over IS in the city
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Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi met Iraqi forces on his arrival in Mosul
Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi has visited Mosul to congratulate Iraqi forces for their "victory" over IS in the city.
Mr Abadi was there to announce the city's full "liberation", his office said in a statement.
Iraqi forces, backed by US-led air strikes, have been battling to retake Mosul since 17 October last year.
Islamic
State militants seized it in June 2014 before taking much of Iraq's
Sunni Arab heartland and proclaiming a "caliphate" straddling Iraq and
Syria.
Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, Sunni Arab tribesmen and Shia militiamen have also been involved in the gruelling battle.
The
Iraqi prime minister arrived to "congratulate the armed forces and the
Iraqi people" on the final defeat of IS in Mosul on Sunday, the
statement said.
He met commanders in the city but has not yet given a speech formally declaring triumph.
Iraqi forces have been battling the remaining pockets of jihadists desperately holding out in a tiny area near the Old City.
Airstrikes and exchanges of gunfire could still be heard on Sunday, and plumes of smoke rose into the sky.
Mr
Abadi's spokesman, Saad al-Hadithi, said victory would not be formally
declared until the few remaining militants were cleared from Mosul,
Reuters news agency reports.
Earlier 30 IS fighters were killed as
they attempted to escape the advance of the Iraqi forces by throwing
themselves in the River Tigris, state media said.
Media captionBBC correspondent Jonathan Beale: 'The is still a lot of misery in Mosul'The government announced the "liberation" of eastern Mosul
in January, but the west of the city, with its narrow, winding streets,
has presented a more difficult challenge.
Some 900,000 people have
been displaced from the city since 2014 - about half the the pre-war
population - aid organisations say.
As "victory" was proclaimed in
Mosul, Save the Children warned of the psychological impact on the
children "haunted by memories of extreme violence, or of loved ones
killed in front of them".
"For children and their families to
process these horrors and rebuild their lives, psychological support
will be absolutely crucial", said Ana Locsin, Save the Children's Iraq
country director.
"But right now the world is providing next to no funding for mental health."
IS has lost large parts of the territory it once controlled in Iraq since the regional offensive began.
But the fall of Mosul does not mean the end of IS in the country. It still has territory elsewhere
- such as Tal Afar and three towns in the western province of Anbar -
and is able to carry out bombings in government-held areas.
French President Emmanuel Macron was among the first to hail the victory of Iraqi forces in Mosul on Sunday, praising the fighters - including French troops in the coalition - who had made it possible.
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