ISIS leaders are fleeing Mosul for Syria, Iraqi defence minister says - Action News
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ISIS leaders are fleeing Mosul for Syria, Iraqi defence minister says

Many ISIS leaders have fled Mosul with their families towards Syria ahead of a planned offensive by U.S.-backed Iraqi forces on the city, Iraq's defence minister said on Saturday.

U.S.-backed forces aim to retake ISIS-held city as financial woes, internal conflict plagues militant group

Iraqi Defence Minister Khaled al-Obeidi says there is increasing tension within ISIS, much of it over financial issues, as the Iraq army plans a mission to retake the city of Mosul. (Ahmed Saad/Reuters)

Many Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) leaders have fled Mosul with their families, moving toward Syria ahead of a planned offensive by U.S.-backed Iraqi forces on the city, Iraq's defence minister said on Saturday.

Khaled al-Obeidi said he had intelligence of increasing conflict, especially over financial issues, among ultra-hardline militants of the group, also known as Daesh.

"Many Daesh families and leaders in Mosul have sold their property and sneaked out toward Syria, and a segment even tried to sneak out towards [Iraq's Kurdish]region," he said in an interview on state television.

ISIS has lost at least half the territory it seized in Iraq in 2014. The group has also lost territory in Syria, where it emerged amid a civil war now in its sixth year. But U.S.-backed rebel forces there have had less success in beating it back.

An ISIS fighter holds the militant group's flag and a weapon on a street in the city of Mosul, June 23, 2014. Many ISIS leaders are reportedly fleeing the city ahead of a planned offensive by Iraqi forces. (Reuters)

Fighters in Mosul, the group's de facto capital in Iraq and the largest city under its control anywhere across its self-proclaimed caliphate, are thought to number in the thousands but probably under 10,000.

Iraq is expected to mobilize up to 30,000 forces to retake the city in co-ordination with U.S.-led coalition air support.

Millions of civilians at risk

The campaign has gained momentum in recent weeks after government forces restored Fallujah and retook a key air base south of Mosul, though some officials still question whether the military will be ready and what will happen in Mosul after ISISis removed.

Obeidi said the biggest challenge will be protecting civilians, who he said number around twomillion.

"We expect when operations begin in the city proper there will be large displacement. The smallest number we are expecting is about half a million people," Obeidi said.

The International Committee for the Red Cross says up to onemillion people could be driven from their homes in Mosul, and the United Nations estimates the number could be even higher.

Ten million Iraqis already require assistance, including more than threemillion who have been internally displaced about one-tenth of the population.

Displaced Iraqi children, who fled from ISIS violence in Mosul, sit on the ground, on the outskirts of Najaf, south of Baghdad June 24, 2015. There are some two million civilians in Mosul, and the International Committee for the Red Cross says roughly half of them could be displaced by the pending military mission. (Reuters)