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ISIS bombs discovered in Iraq mosque

opera.com 2 days ago

During restoration work in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, the United Nations said that they had found five bombs in a wall of the famous Al-Nuri mosque, installed years earlier by the Islamic State organization.

A UNESCO spokesperson told AFP late Friday that the crew working at the site discovered five "large-scale explosive devices, designed to trigger a massive destruction of the site" in the prayer hall's southern wall on Tuesday.

The 12th-century Al-Nuri mosque in Mosul and the nearby leaning minaret known as Al-Hadba, or the "hunchback," were demolished in the fight to recover the city from IS.

The Iraqi army claimed that IS, which controlled the city for three years, had detonated bombs there. The UN cultural organization UNESCO has been trying to restore the site and the city's significant architectural assets, much of which was destroyed in the fight to recover the city in 2017.

"The situation is now fully under control after the Iraqi armed forces promptly secured the area," UNESCO continued.

Although one device was taken out, four more "remain connected to each other" and should be eliminated in the next several days, according to the statement.

When the site was cleared by Iraqi forces in 2020, the agency stated, "These explosive devices were hidden inside a wall, which was specially rebuilt around them: it explains why they could not be discovered."

The Joint Operations Command spokesperson for the various Iraqi forces, General Tahseen al-Khafaji, said that "several explosive devices from ISIS jihadists in Al-Nuri mosque" had been found.

In July 2014, the then-leader of IS, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, declared the creation of the group's "caliphate" from the Al-Nuri mosque.

Large portions of Iraq and neighboring Syria were overrun by the jihadists, who brutally reigned over them. In 2017, IS was driven from Mosul by Iraqi forces supported by a coalition led by the US.

AFP

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