Iraqi forces backed by coalition air strikes on Thursday pushed the ISIL group from Qayyarah, a northern town considered strategic for any future offensive against the terrorists’ last stronghold of Mosul.
Iraqi forces backed by coalition air strikes on Thursday pushed the ISIL group from Qayyarah, a northern town considered strategic for any future offensive against the terrorists' last stronghold of Mosul.
"We control all parts of the town and managed, in very limited time, to root out ISIL," Lieutenant General Riyadh Jalal Tawfik, who commands Iraq's ground forces, told an AFP reporter in Qayyarah.
The commander said engineering units were now clearing the town, which lies about 60 kilometers (35 miles) south of Mosul, of unexploded ordnance and booby traps.
Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi issued a statement hailing what he said was a key step towards reclaiming Mosul, ISIL's de facto Iraq capital and the country's second city.
"Our heroic forces achieved a big victory, an important step towards the liberation of Mosul," Abadi said.
"I present my congratulations to the Iraqi people for the liberation of the strategic town of Qayyarah and neighboring areas," he said.
The operation to retake Qayyarah was launched on Tuesday and led by Iraq's elite counter-terrorism service.
Iraqi forces had already recaptured a nearby air field and Qayyarah is expected to be become one of the main launchpads for an assault on Mosul in the coming weeks or months.