Iraqi forces repelled an offensive launched in the early hours of yesterday by Islamic State on the own of Shirqat, south of Mosul, during which more than 38 military and civilians were killed and 40 more wounded, security sources said.
About 24 Islamic State fighters were also killed in the fighting, which ended around midday, the sources said.
About half the dead in the city were civilians and the rest members of the Iraqi armed forces and  tribal fighters.
A curfew was still in place in the early evening.
Islamic State lost Shirqat to US-backed Iraqi government forces and tribal fighters last year.
Its fall paved the way for the offensive on Mosul, the militants’ de-facto capital in Iraq.
Eight months into the US-backed offensive to take back Mosul, all of the city has been retaken by Iraqi government forces except an enclave by the western bank of the Tigris river.
Meanwhile,  Iraq’s paramilitary Hashed al-Shaabi forces said  that they had retaken all areas west of Mosul from the Islamic State group except the town of Tal Afar.
The umbrella organisation, which is dominated by Iran-backed Shia militias, has been fighting primarily on a separate western front since the battle to retake Mosul was launched in October last year.
Their main objective has been to isolate IS fighters battling elite forces inside the city by cutting off their supply lines to remaining strongholds in the Syrian part of their now crumbing “caliphate”.“Hashed forces declare the liberation of all areas west of Mosul except Tal Afar,” the organisation said on social media.
Tal Afar is a large town that lies about 50 kilometres west of Mosul on the way to Syria and is still in the hands of the militants, although almost completely surrounded by anti-IS forces.
While the Counter-Terrorism Service and other federal forces were retaking Mosul one neighbourhood after another as well as urban areas around it, Hashed forces worked their way north and west through mostly desert regions of Iraq.
The Hashed’s top Iraqi military commander, known as Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis, spoke overnight to hail the achievements of his forces.
“The Hashed are awaiting orders from the prime minister and commander-in-chief of the armed forces (Haider al-Abadi) to storm the district of Tal Afar,” he was quoted as saying in a statement. He said that Hashed forces had taken control of an area about two kilometres from Iraq’s western border with neighbouring Syria, where another alliance of forces backed a US-led coalition is battling IS.
“The Hashed have not entered yet,” he said, without elaborating.
Abadi has repeatedly said that no Iraqi forces should cross the border into Syria.
The Hashed al-Shaabi is nominally under his command but some of its components have for years been sending fighters to support Damascus in its six-year-old conflict against various rebel groups.


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