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UN: Food aid reaches besieged Shirqat for first time in two years

September 28, 2016 at 7:06 pm

Sunni Muslims, who fled Daesh’s strongholds of Hawija and Shirqat, arrive at the town of Dibis, northwest of Kirkuk, Iraq, August 18, 2016. [REUTERS/Ako Rasheed/File Photo]

Food aid has reached families in the northern Iraqi town of Shirqat for the first time since its capture by Daesh militants more than two years ago, the World Food Programme (WFP) said today.

The Iraqi military retook Shirqat district last week, after surrounding it for months.

Tens of thousands of civilians were thought to have been trapped in the town and nearby villages since 2014.

WFP said they have been living under “very harsh conditions”, struggling to access water, food, medical services and local markets.

“Families in Shirqat are in desperate need of humanitarian support after being cut off from the outside world for more than two years,” said Sally Haydock, WFP’s country director in Iraq.

The UN agency has distributed rice, lentils, wheat flour, bulgur wheat, beans and vegetable oil for an initial 1,000 people, through its partner Muslim Aid.

WFP said it will monitor the situation and support people in the town and surrounding villages over the coming weeks.

Earlier this month, the agency distributed emergency food aid to 30,000 people in the nearby town of Qayyarah, which had also been under siege for more than two years.

The agency found that all its shops had either been destroyed or closed and people were surviving on wheat from the recent harvest. They also lacked safe drinking water, electricity and medical services.

The recapture of Shirqat is a stepping stone in the Iraqi military’s move on Daesh’s stronghold of Mosul.