Iraqis demand ‘justice’ after US probe into Mosul strike
MOSUL, Iraq — Little has changed at the scene of the al-Jadida airstrike that killed more than 100 civilians more than two months ago and ratcheted up pressure on the U.S.-led coalition to address allegations of mounting civilian casualties in the fight against the Islamic State group.
While bulldozers have cleared the main street of debris so vehicles and pedestrians can pass, the houses destroyed by the fierce clashes to “liberate” the neighbourhood remain reduced to mounds of rubble.
Initially, residents say they were inundated with journalists and Iraqi government officials, but within a week the neighbourhood was “abandoned,” said Ali Idriss, 30, whose home is within eyesight of the house hit by the U.S. bomb on March 17.
Idriss said the Pentagon investigation released Thursday that acknowledged 105 civilians were killed in the airstrike is relatively insignificant.


