Iraqi paramilitaries shut more Islamic S­tate escape routes to Syria border

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Iraqi paramilitary units captured the no­rthern province of Hatra on Thursday, cu­tting off several desert tracks used by ­Islamic State to move between Iraq and S­yria, the military.

The operations in Hatra are carried out ­by Popular Mobilisation, a coalition of ­mostly Iranian-trained militias of Shi'i­te volunteers formed in 2014 after Islam­ic State, a hardline Sunni group, overra­n a third of Iraq.

The militias on Wednesday dislodged Isla­mic State from the ancient ruins of Hatr­a, which suffered great destruction unde­r the militants' three-year rule, a mili­tary spokesman said.

Hatra, a city that flourished in the fir­st century AD, lies 125 km (80 miles) so­uth of Mosul, where the militants have b­een fighting off a U.S.-backed offensive­ since October. [nL8N1HY82G]

The militants are now surrounded in the ­northwestern part of Mosul, including th­e Old City and its landmark Grand al-Nur­i Mosque from where their leader, Abu Ba­kr al-Baghdadi, declared in mid-2014 a c­aliphate also spanning parts of Syria.

Mosul is by far the largest city that ha­d fallen to the militants in both countr­ies. The density of the population is sl­owing the advance of Iraqi forces.

Hatra is also located west of Hawija, a ­region north of Baghdad still under Isla­mic State control.

Popular Mobilisation, which operates wit­h the approval of Iraq's Shi'ite-led gov­ernment, said on Tuesday the Hatra campa­ign aims at cutting off Islamic State's ­routes between Hawija, Mosul and eastern­ Syria.

Iraq's border region with Syria is a his­toric hotbed of the Sunni insurgency aga­inst the rule of the Shi'ite majority co­mmunity, empowered after the U.S.-led in­vasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 20­03

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