Daesh terrorists surrender to Iraqi forces near Mosul
Roughly 85 percent of Iraq’s Nineveh province has been cleared of terrorist presence, military sources assert
Scores of Daesh terrorists on Monday surrendered to Iraqi security forces west of Mosul, regional capital of the northern Nineveh province, according to an Iraqi military source.
“Fifty-three militants laid down their arms in the Al-Hadar district’s Al-Wadi area some 80 kilometers [roughly 50 miles] west of Mosul,” Brigadier-General Saad al-Janabi of the army’s rapid-reaction forces told Anadolu Agency.
The militants, he said, had turned themselves over to Iraqi joint forces deployed in the area.
“About half of those who surrendered were local people who joined the group when it overran Mosul in mid-2014,” al-Janabi said.
“The rest,” he added, “were foreigners from Arab and European countries.”
According to the military officer, the locals have been referred to Iraqi national security officials while the foreign nationals have been sent to Iraq’s counter-terrorism agency.
In a related development, Colonel Ahmed al-Jabouri of the army’s Nineveh operations command told Anadolu Agency on Monday that some 85 percent of Nineveh had been cleared of the Daesh presence to date.
On Saturday, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced that Iraq’s border with Syria had been completely secured.
In August, al-Abadi declared -- prematurely perhaps -- that Nineveh had been “entirely liberated” from Daesh, which has recently suffered a string of defeats in Iraq and Syria after overrunning much of both countries in mid-2014.