Iraqi Kurds push into contested northern town

Image
AP Mount Sinjar
Last Updated : Dec 22 2014 | 12:55 AM IST
With coalition warplanes circling overhead, Kurdish fighters pushed into the contested northern Iraqi town of Sinjar today, touching off heavy clashes with Islamic State militants who have controlled the area for months.
The battle for Sinjar and the surrounding areas has become the latest focus in the campaign to take back territory lost to the Islamic State group during the militants' summer blitz that captured much of northern and western Iraq. IS also controls a large chunk of neighbouring Syria.
Last week, Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters launched the operation to retake Sinjar. So far, they've managed to open up a passageway to Mount Sinjar, a long, rugged mountain that overlooks the town. That push allowed some of the thousands of Yazidis trapped on the mountain since the town's fall in August to evacuate.
Today pershmerga fighters said they advanced into Sinjar itself. Loud explosions and intense gunbattles could be heard echoing from inside the town as US-led coalition warplanes bombed Islamic State militants from the sky.
"We were fighting inside Sinjar. There were snipers everywhere inside," said 28-year-old Kurdish fighter Nabil Mohammed. "One of them fired a rocket-propelled grenade at us. I ran into a house and I was hit by a sniper's bullet in my thigh."
Mohammed spoke in a field hospital on Mount Sinjar, where he and many of the 20 wounded Kurdish fighters were brought for treatment. Ambulances rushed the wounded to the clinic. Inside, fighters wept as the body of one man killed by a sniper's bullet was placed into a body bag.
Earlier today, the president of the self-ruled northern Kurdish region, Masoud Bazani, toured Kurdish positions on Mount Sinjar, where he vowed to defeat the Islamic State group.
"Most of the districts are under our control," Barzani told peshmerga troops. "We will crush the Islamic State."
At least 15 Kurdish fighters wounded in today's clashes were brought from the front-lines to a makeshift clinic on the mountain.
Meanwhile, Iraqi counter-terrorism forces launched an offensive yesterday to retake the military airport near the town of Tal Afar from the IS group, said a Baghdad official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to talk to media.
Mainstream rebels as well as al-Qaida-linked fighters have been battling IS northeast of the city of Aleppo for months, while also trying to fend off an advance by Syrian government forces to encircle the opposition-held areas of the city.
In Baghdad, police said roadside bombs hit four busy commercial areas, killing 11 people and wounding 30.
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First Published: Dec 22 2014 | 12:55 AM IST

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