![]() Iraq governor's nephew gunned down in north: officials Arbil, Iraq (AFP) Aug 13, 2016 - The nephew of the governor of a key province where Iraqi forces are battling the Islamic State group has been gunned down in the country's north, officials said Saturday. The shooting in Iraqi Kurdish regional capital Arbil came just hours after Nowfal al-Aqoub, the governor of Nineveh, made controversial remarks about children being fathered by IS fighters in the province. The killing of Aqoub's nephew, who was also his personal driver, comes as Iraqi forces prepare for the battle to retake Mosul, the capital of Nineveh and the last city in the country still held by the jihadists. Sifuk Watban al-Sultan died of a single gunshot to the head on Friday night near the governor's house in Arbil, the governor's secretary told AFP, asking that he not be identified by name. A Nineveh provincial councillor, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed Sultan's death, saying that Kurdish security forces had subsequently removed surveillance cameras from the house as part of the investigation. The motive for the killing was not immediately clear, but it came after Aqoub made remarks at a conference in Baghdad earlier on Friday that were criticised by a political rival. The governor said that IS fighters had fathered children under temporary marriages as part of so-called "sexual jihad", a practice used by the jihadist group to motivate its militants. Some of the women involved -- including some of those who travelled to the Middle East to support IS -- have apparently participated voluntarily, but others may have been coerced. While Aqoub was apparently criticising IS, the office of former parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi issued a statement accusing him of insulting the women of Mosul. Iraqi forces have been conducting operations to set the stage for the battle to retake Mosul from IS, which has held it since June 2014, but they still have significant ground to cover as well as logistical preparations to make before a final assault can be launched.
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An Iraqi Kurdish reporter was killed and another wounded on Sunday during a military operation against the Islamic State group in northern Iraq, officials said.
The incident occurred during an operation launched by the Kurdish peshmerga forces near Mosul, the country's second city and the jihadist organisation's de facto capital in Iraq.
The journalists, working together for Kurdistan TV, were following peshmerga forces involved in the assault which began early Sunday.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party, which owns the channel, announced the death in a statement.
"We deplore the loss... of cameraman Mustafa Said from the Kurdistan TV satellite channel and the injury of correspondent Hayman Nanqli," the KDP media office said in a statement.
It said the incident was caused by a mortar round fired into a village recently retaken by the peshmerga from IS.
Iraq's Journalistic Freedoms Observatory, a press freedom NGO, confirmed the cameraman's death.
A peshmerga commander said the goal of the operation was to secure a part of the Nineveh plain between Mosul and Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region.
"A military operation was launched this morning... to recapture 10 villages on the eastern bank of the Khazr river (and) has so far succeeded in recapturing six," Colonel Muwaffaq Zebari told an AFP reporter on the frontline.
He said the ground operation was getting air support from the US-led coalition and was aimed at preventing further IS attacks on an area called Gweyr, about 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of Mosul.
A senior officer in the peshmerga, who was speaking on condition of anonymity, said seven members of the Kurdish forces were also killed in the fighting, but no official confirmation was immediately available.
Mosul is the last remaining city controlled by IS in Iraq and the next big military target for the myriad forces battling the jihadists in the country.
The Kurdish advance east of Mosul on Sunday is part of shaping operations that have been taking place on several fronts for weeks.
Federal forces have also been working their way northwards up the Tigris river valley in a bid to set up bases around Mosul and start tightening the noose around IS's last major bastion.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has vowed to retake Mosul and rid the country of IS by the end of 2016.
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