Baghdad - Najla Al Taee
The international coalition warplanes shelled ISIS's sites in center of Mosul, while an official security source said ISIS elements attacked the civilians in two liberated districts in the right side of Mosul.
The commander of liberalization the right side of Mosul, Abdul Amir Yaar Allaah, mentioned in a brief statement, that a force from the ninth group, Tuesday, liberated al-Damarjy village, south of Badush.
According to military source, the security forces approached from the main government complex in the right coast of the city of Mosul, pointing out that the organization carried out a violent mortar attacks and sniping on civilians and Iraqi forces stationed in the neighborhood of Jawasaq and al-Tayaran, south of Mosul.
The leader of federal police, Raed Jawdat, said in a statement that the extremist organization lives in a state of confusion and defeatism, and our intelligence reports refer to the disintegration of the organization and the flight of its senior leaders from Mosul.
Military Intelligence Directorate announced that according to accurate information and in coordination with the air force jets, they managed to destroy ISIS's sites and killed 17 extremists, who were transporting materiel, as well as the burning of three wheels in one of orchards located in Hawijah Pomegranate area in the district-based western Anbar.
Local sources indicated that coalition aircraft launched more than seven raids in al-Dawasa neighborhood, on the left coast of Mosul.
Iraqi forces have made rapid progress in the early stages of the attack in an effort to recover the western part of Mosul, recuperating control of the airport and penetrated the defenses of the organization around the city within days.
On the other hand, Influential Shia cleric and militia leader, Muqtada al-Sadr, apologized to Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, Tuesday, after demonstrators believed to be loyal to Sadr assaulted the premier’s convoy in Wasit.
In a statement, al-Sadr said the assault on Abadi’s convoy was a breach against the prestige of the state, and is a reprehensible and unacceptable work.
Dozens of students from the University of Wasit, in southern Iraq, earlier Tuesday, demonstrated on campus to protest against the visit of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to their university.
The protesters chanted a slogan which supporters of al-Sadr used during their demonstrations in Baghdad two weeks ago. The slogan calls for "totally uprooting" the government, accusing it of corruption.