Headlines
IS leader has fled Mosul, victory imminent: Iraqi governor
Erbil (Iraq), Nov 13 The top leader of the Jihadist Islamic State
(IS) has fled Mosul, last extremist enclave left on Iraqi soil, according to
the governor of the Nineveh province in Iraq.
Governor Nofal Hamadi al-Sultan, whose governorate's capital is Mosul,
announced during a press conference that Daesh' supreme leader and
self-proclaimed Caliph Abu Bakr al- Baghdadi had fled Mosul" and that
victory was "imminent", Efe news agency reported.
According to al-Sultan, the last audio broadcast by al-Baghdadi indicates that
he has left Mosul.
In said audio address broadcast on November 3, the self-proclaimed Caliph urged
his followers not to abandon Mosul.
"Do not flee. This is the prelude to a great victory," he said in an
apparent attempt to encourage his army.
During his press conference, the governor assured that IS collapse is
"imminent" and that Iraqi forces are "rapidly" closing in
for the final push into Mosul.
Mosul's neighbourhoods "have been the scenario of victorious advances by
Iraqi security forces" said al-Sultan who stressed the final
"decisive" battle against the Jihadists will take place "very
soon".
The Iraqi and Kurdish troop offensive to liberate Mosul began on October 17
with a three-pronged offensive along the north, south and eastern fronts, which
has enabled the liberation of various eastern Mosul neighbourhoods.












