How a family escaped Iraq's besieged Fallujah

 

How a family escaped Iraqs besieged Fallujah
Iraqis from Fallujah carry water at a camp where they are taking shelter some 30km on the southern outskirts of the city.

Baghdad - The deal was sealed with the 'wali' in two days. Abu Marwan prepared his car and his family and Abu Omar's wife all squeezed in.

By AFP

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Published: Sat 11 Jun 2016, 12:00 AM

Last updated: Sat 11 Jun 2016, 10:19 PM

Abu Marwan, his wife and his three children are among the very few Iraqi civilians to have escaped from the heart of the Daesh group's besieged stronghold of Fallujah.
Most of the more than 20,000 people who have reached safety since Iraqi forces launched an offensive last month are from the outskirts of the city, which lies only 50 kilometres west of Baghdad.
The 49-year-old man and his family were able to leave Fallujah this week but tens of thousands more civilians remained trapped in the city by Daesh.
This is the account he gave AFP by telephone of life under the militants and how his family eventually got out: "We did not flee Fallujah when Daesh took over at the end of 2013," he said, referring to the start of a period of anti-government protests during which Daesh's previous incarnation gradually took over the city.
"We expected the crisis would end within weeks or months. But the gunmen soon had the people on a tight leash, imposing new rules, issuing decrees, setting up barriers and planting bombs on the streets.
"That continued through 2014 and 2015... We were already affected by this but our living conditions deteriorated abruptly at the beginning of this year.
"My neighbour and I contacted somebody called Abu Omar, who is a Daesh member known as the "wali" (local chief) of southern Fallujah, to facilitate our exfiltration from the city in return for smuggling his wife with us," Abu Marwan said. "He had cut a deal for his wife to be taken to Kirkuk.
"Daesh calls the wives of its members 'State women' and women in the city who have not pledged allegiance to the movement are called 'common women'," Abu Marwan explained.
The deal was sealed with the 'wali' in two days. Abu Marwan prepared his car and his family and Abu Omar's wife all squeezed in.
"We were stopped at many checkpoints but when we said Abu Omar sent us, they let us through. Then he appeared on a motorcycle and drove in front of us to open the way. He told us we should keep a distance of 100 metres.
Abu Marwan said they snaked their way down to an area called Zoba by the Euphrates.
"There were many Daesh fighters along the way, heavily armed and hiding in various shelters," he said.
A senior commander in the operation to retake Fallujah, one of the militants' most emblematic bastions, said up to 2,500 Daesh fighters were defending the city.
In Zoba, Daesh was out in numbers, controlling who left the area.
"Some families had been there for four days, waiting to cross the river. Some were arguing with Daesh," Abu Marwan said.
"I left my car with Daesh. After also arguing with them, we boarded a small boat with my family and Abu Omar's wife but Daesh said the men should swim," he said.
"After crossing the river, we walked a short distance and found the Iraqi army and the Hashed Al Shaabi" paramilitary umbrella organisation, he said.


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