Rescued 'human shields' narrate Mosul horror

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Rescued human shields narrate Mosul horror

Half a million people are currently displaced

By AFP

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Published: Tue 16 May 2017, 8:15 PM

Last updated: Tue 16 May 2017, 10:20 PM

Fear and hunger are driving an ever-growing number of Iraqi civilians into a camp in Hammam Al Alil, where they share harrowing tales of deadly violence and extremist tyranny in Mosul.
Some arrive at the displacement camp, the largest in the Mosul area, on foot, but most of them are crammed into buses and trucks, relieved and exhausted.
Half a million people are currently displaced as a result of the massive seven-month-old offensive to retake Iraq's second city from Daesh.
Last week saw what the Norwegian Refugee Council said was the biggest single-day displacement since the start of the operation, with around 20,000 fleeing neighbourhoods of west Mosul.
"I feel safe, I did not think I would get out of there alive," said Shams Hassan, a woman in her forties who reached the Hammam Al Alil camp with 16 members of her family.
She is from Al Faruq neighbourhood of Mosul's Old City and lost track of the number of times she and her relatives had to change houses and neighbour-hoods in recent months.
"They always wanted us to be in front of them to use us as human shields. They would come to tell us to change houses," she said. "We would find our-selves in the middle of shelling and car bombs. One of the houses we lived in was struck by a mortar round, it collapsed on us and I was wounded by shrapnel. I had to be carried," she said.
A large population remains in Mosul's Old City, where Daesh appears to have concentrated most of its remaining re-sources. Some estimates put the number of civilians still trapped in west Mosul at 250,000.Human shields have become a central feature of the vastly outnumbered extremists defence and Daesh has stopped at nothing to deter people from escaping.
"Those who tried to flee were executed in the streets and their bodies hung from posts," Shams Hassan said. Her mother, who reached Hammam Al Alil a few weeks earlier, sat next to her, her gaze lost in the distance.
"Daesh would take our food," the old lady said. "They would come with their guns and take our clothes, too." Trapped residents inside the areas still controlled by Daesh have warned recently that hunger was beginning to kill more people than the intense fighting itself. There is no clean water left to drink and even unclean water is hard to come by. People are boiling paper and cartons to fill their stomachs.
"A bottle of oil was 50,000 dinars (around 40 US dollars), a can of tomatoes was 50,000 dinars too. Flour was 5,000 dinars. We ate some of it and got sick," said Shams Hassan.
"We haven't showered the kids in two months, they have lice on their hair," she said. Having moved countless times, they eventually managed to escape when the Iraqi security forces reached their neighbourhood and escorted them out through holes that both sides have punched in walls in people's homes to move up and down blocks undetected.
"We were walking on broken glass and rubble ... my son had to carry me," she said.
At age 72, Ahmed Yunis Dawood dodged sniper fire to leave west Mosul through the neighbourhood's water mains. "For five days, I would go out at night to check out the streets," he recounted.
In the Hammam Al Alil camp, he reached early Sunday, the elderly man found safety but little else.
"The people who arrive here have no tent, no bed to sleep in, no food, no water," Dawood said.
Aid groups have been delivering assistance in the camps to tens of thou-sands of civilians daily but the lack of funding, the recent peak in displacement and soaring temperatures are leaving many outside the relief net.
In the dusty chaos engulfing the entrance of the camp, where new arrivals are screened and in most cases subsequently dispatched to other locations, one man cried in despair.
"We fled death only to face death here.... Take us home, it is better for us," he said. "An air strike will come and we will die together. We were eating grass like cows but at least we were in our homes."  
 


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