Shropshire Star

Journalist dies of wounds from blast which killed two others in Iraq’s Mosul

Veronique Robert died in a Paris hospital on Saturday.

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Smoke from an explosion rises during fighting against Islamic State militants in the old city of Mosul, Iraq (Felipe Dana/AP)

A Swiss journalist has died from injuries she suffered in a mine blast in Mosul earlier this week while reporting on the fight against the Islamic State group.

Veronique Robert died in a Paris hospital on Saturday, Sophie Pommier, a French Embassy spokeswoman, told the Associated Press. State-owned France Television said Robert had covered numerous conflicts and expressed its “sincere condolences”.

Iraqi Kurdish journalist Bakhtiyar Haddad and French journalist Stephen Villeneuve, who were working with Robert, were also killed in the explosion. Haddad died moments after the blast and Villeneuve died hours later from his wounds.

An Iraqi man removes rubble from his damaged house in a neighborhood recently retaken by Iraqi security forces during fights against Islamic State militants in Mosul (Felipe Dana/AP)
An Iraqi man removes rubble from his damaged house in a neighborhood recently retaken by Iraqi security forces during fights against Islamic State militants in Mosul (Felipe Dana/AP)

The fight to retake Iraq’s second largest city was launched more than eight months ago, and, while Iraqi forces experienced periods of swift gains, fighting inside the city has been slow and deadly for both Iraqi security forces and civilians.

In February, Iraqi Kurdish journalist Shifa Gerdi was killed by a roadside bomb just south of Mosul, which also wounded her colleague, Younis Mustafa. In October, Iraqi television journalist Ali Raysan was killed while covering a battle to retake a small village south of Mosul.

This week, Iraqi forces began to push into Mosul’s Old City, where they expect to encounter the toughest fighting yet. Streets shrink to the width of footpaths in the densely populated district, where the United Nations estimates IS fighters are holding some 100,000 civilians as human shields.

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