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Added on the 20/02/2017 14:54:19 - Copyright : France 24 EN
Iraqi forces launched an assault Sunday to retake Mosul's Old City, the last district still held by the Islamic State group three years after the jihadists seized the northern city and declared their "caliphate". IMAGES of security forces in support of the operation
Iraqi forces on Sunday launched an assault to retake Mosul's Old City and push out the Islamic State group, three years after the jihadists seized the city and announced their "caliphate". IMAGES
Iraq's forces resumed their advance on the Islamic State group's bastion of Mosul Monday, aiming to position themselves a few hundred metres from the city's eastern limits. IMAGES
New York, June 22 (EFE ) .- New York City embarked on Phase 2 of reopening on Monday with barbershops resuming businesses and restaurants opening for outdoor dining, after more than 100 days of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Camera: JORGE FUENTELSAZ).FOOTAGE SHOWS A BARBERSHOP AND RESTAURANTS REOPENING IN NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, US.SOUNDBITES: 1.) PIERRE LUIGI PALAZZO, OWNER OF ITALIAN RESTAURANT GNOCCO IN NEW YORK CITY 2.) A CUSTOMER AT VESELKA RESTAURANT IN NEW YORK CITY. 3.) JASON BIRCHARD, OWNER OF VESELKA RESTAURANT IN NEW YORK CITY. 4.) WILLIAM KELLY, A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ASTOR PLACE ASSOCIATION WHO OVERSAW THE ORGANIZATION OF PUBLIC SPACES ON ASTOR PLACE STREET IN NEW YORK CITY (IN ENGLISH).
This little toddler named Bilal Tagirov was just two years old when his father kidnapped him and forced him to travel to Syria in October 2015. Bilal's father Hassan Tagirov left the Chechen Republic in order to fight for the self-proclaimed Islamic State. His mother Zalikha Ashakhanova only found out that her son was located in Mosul by chance when she saw a video of him online on July 15, 2017. The toddler was found by Chechen security forces in Mosul and finally reunited with Zalikha in Grozny on Thursday, returning to her waiting arms.
Women living in Haji Ali, a group of villages numbering about 40,000 people in northern Iraq about 40 miles south of Mosul, have taken up arms to protect the area from Islamic State militants. IS-controlled villages are only about a mile away, so women have learned how to use weapons and have started guarding their families' houses at night, in order to help their men, which rotate in and out of the frontline. Villagers fear that IS could sneak across the Tigris river and into the village under the cover of night, and are complaining that locals don't have enough weapons to defend themselves.