Iraqi forces on Thursday battled the last remaining Islamic State group fighters in Mosul's Old City, where the U.N. said up to 20,000 civilians are trapped and in "extreme danger."
In neighboring Syria, U.S.-backed forces are facing fierce resistance from IS as they wage a parallel offensive to recapture the city of Raqa from the jihadists.
The fighting in both cities is taking place in densely populated residential neighborhoods, which are sustaining a high civilian death toll and heavy damage as diehard jihadists put up a desperate last stand.
"Our estimate at this stage is that in the final pockets of (Mosul's) Old City, there could be as many as 15,000 civilians, possibly even as high as 20,000," U.N. humanitarian coordinator in Iraq Lise Grande told AFP.
"They're in extreme danger from bombardment, from artillery crossfire. The (IS) fighters that are still there are still directly targeting civilians if they try and leave," she said.
More than eight months after the start of the operation to retake Mosul from IS, the jihadists have gone from fully controlling the city to holding a small pocket on the west bank of the River Tigris that flows through it.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi congratulated the security forces on the "achievement of this major victory in Mosul."
But troops and police are facing a rising number of suicide attacks, including some by female bombers, as the campaign nears its climax.
The battle for Mosul has pushed 915,000 to flee their homes, nearly 700,000 of whom are still displaced.
"We exceeded our worst case scenario more than a month ago. In our very worst-case scenario, we thought that 750,000 people would flee," Grande said.
- Heavy damage -
The damage caused by the fighting in west Mosul -- and the cost of addressing it -- is huge.
There are "44 residential neighborhoods in western Mosul. Six are nearly completely destroyed... Twenty-two neighborhoods are moderately damaged and 16 are lightly damaged," Grande said.
Based on a preliminary assessment, the first phase of "stabilization" in west Mosul -- which includes basic services, infrastructure, housing, education and police stations -- will cost $707 million.
That is nearly double the expected figure, "because the level of damage in western Mosul is far higher than what we feared it would be," she said.
As Iraq fights to retake Mosul, the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces -- an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters -- have been battling IS in its de facto Syrian capital Raqa.
The SDF broke into Raqa on June 6 after a months-long operation to encircle the city and earlier this week penetrated its historic heart.
Tens of thousands of civilians are believed to be trapped inside the city, and there are fears that the jihadists are using them as human shields.
The assault has been backed by intense air strikes by the U.S.-led coalition fighting IS and they have exacted a heavy civilian toll.
At least 224 civilians, including 38 children, have been killed in air strikes since the SDF entered the city, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Britain-based monitoring group said it did not have a toll for civilians killed in other ways, including by other military operations, mines, or while trying to flee the city.
Many residents who have managed to escape say IS snipers are targeting anyone trying to leave the city.
The coalition estimates that around 2,500 jihadists are defending Raqa.
So far, 311 jihadists and 106 SDF fighters have been killed in the battle for the city, according to the Observatory, which has a wide network of sources on the ground.
The loss of Mosul and Raqa, IS' two most emblematic strongholds, would be a major blow for the jihadists, effectively ending the cross-border "caliphate" they declared in June 2014.
But they still hold other parts of Iraq and Syria, and are likely to revert to their insurgent roots, mounting hit-and-run and bomb attacks where they no longer hold territory.
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