Iraq Fighters Take 'Victory Selfies' at Tal Afar Citadel

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Seizing the city of Tal Afar district by district, Iraqi fighters would take down the Islamic State group's black flags and hang them upside-down as they took "victory selfies."

But of all the areas they reclaimed, it was the historic heart of Tal Afar and its Ottoman-era citadel that was the high point.

Once an integral part of the Assyrian empire, Tal Afar's history goes back thousands of years and the city is dominated by the citadel, which was damaged in 2014 when IS blew up some of its walls.

The citadel "is a pillar of civilization, it's a major historical monument for all the Iraqi and Arab people," says Abdel Hamid al-Attar, a 49-year-old fighter with the Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary units that fought alongside government forces.

Atop a hill overlooking Tal Afar, the citadel weathered the many storms of violence that have shaken Iraq, including the 2003 U.S. invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

After the invasion, it served as the headquarters of the municipal council and the local police.

Two years later American forces set up a base in Tel Afar and launched Operation Restoring Rights to break the hold of al-Qaida and other insurgents in the city.

The operation was seen as a major success for the U.S. military and was led by H.R. McMaster, then a colonel and now U.S. President Donald Trump's national security adviser.

Through it all the citadel stood intact, until IS blew up its northern and western walls in 2014, sparking condemnation from U.N. cultural agency UNESCO.

During their three-year occupation of Tal Afar, the extremist Sunni Muslim jihadists turned the citadel into a prison where they chained men and women whose behavior they considered "sinful."

"When we retook the citadel we found chains and other things IS used to restrain their prisoners," said Attar.

"I was shocked and sad when I saw the damage caused by IS," he said.

- 'Where are they?' -

Not far from the citadel stands Tal Afar's grand mosque, its minaret damaged during the fighting. Half-way up, Hashed fighters have hoisted the green banner of one of their units, the Abbas Brigade.

Fighters have taken up positions near the top to scout the area, and from up there they have a clear view of the extent of the damage inflicted on Tal Afar.

The offensive was preceded by intensive air strikes on IS targets and huge craters can be seen around the city, where electricity poles have been uprooted, homes and shops destroyed.

Some homes appear undamaged but none of the militiamen dare go inside fearing they could be booby-trapped.

Except for the fighters there is not a soul around; most of the city's 200,000-strong residents were long gone before the offensive was launched last week.

IS graffiti is everywhere, however, with "Property of the Islamic State" or "God is greatest" scrawled on walls and building facades.

In the district surrounding the citadel, IS black flags that once flew from every corner have been brought down by the Iraqi forces and turned upside down.

A group of Hashed fighters grab a tattered IS flag as one of their comrades, who calls himself Abu Abbas, takes out his cell phone to snap a "victory selfie."

Turning to an AFP correspondent, Abu Abbas ridicules IS for its boasting that "the Islamic State will stay on and persist."

"Where are they? I don't see any one of them here," said Abbas, who hails from the Shiite shrine city of Karbala in southern Iraq.

As temperatures soar, some fighters find a spring of cool water to wipe away the dust caking their faces and hair, while others simply dive in for a swim.

Suddenly one of the Hashed militiamen shouts out: "Hey guys, do you think the water is booby-trapped?"

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