Three people killed in Mosul car bombing

Blast near a restaurant is the first such bombing since the city was freed from ISIS last year

MOSUL, IRAQ - NOVEMBER 06:  People walk on a road next to the destroyed Baghdad Hotel in West Mosul on November 6, 2017 in Mosul, Iraq. Five months after Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city was liberated from ISIL in a nine-month long battle, residents have returned to the destroyed city to rebuild their lives. After more than two years of ISIL occupation, savage fighting, airstrikes and as ISIL fighters retreated they intentionally destroyed remaining key infrastructure such as bridges, government buildings, water and sewage facilities and neighborhoods laced with booby traps and homemade bombs leaving the city in ruins. Despite the damage residents have hastily returned and managed to setup temporary shops, homes and services to help bring the city back to life. In West Mosul, home to the Old City, more than 32,000 homes were destroyed and a recent report from the U.N. estimates repairing Mosul's basic infrastructure will cost more than $1 billion and take years to complete. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
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Three people were killed in a car bombing in Mosul, the first such attack in the northern Iraqi city since it was liberated from ISIS last year.

The extremist group, which once controlled a cross-border "caliphate" home to millions of people, lost control of Mosul and the rest of its urban strongholds in 2017 but it has continued to wage guerilla-style attacks across Iraq.

The car bomb detonated on Thursday night at a restaurant in the war-ravaged west of Iraq's second city.

"A terrorist attack via car bomb hit near a restaurant in western Mosul," Iraq's security services said in a statement.

The blast killed three people and wounded 12 others, a security official told AFP. A medical source confirmed the toll.

Neither could say whether the victims were civilians or combatants, but witnesses in Mosul said the restaurant is known to be frequented by security personnel.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blast.

ISIS overran Mosul in 2014, transforming the northern city into its de facto Iraqi capital until government forces recaptured it in July 2017.

Months later, the Iraqi government declared it had fully defeated ISIS.

But the group still carries out bloody hit-and-run attacks against civilian and government infrastructure, mostly in the rugged mountain terrain of the north and in desert areas along the western border with Syria.

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