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UN calls for more aid as people flee Mosul

March 31, 2017 at 3:08 pm

Internally displaced people, who fled from the clashes between the Iraqi Army and Daesh terrorists, wait in a line to receive humanitarian aid in Nineveh, Iraq on 29 March 2017 [Yunus Keleş/Anadolu]

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres today called on world powers to increase aid to help people fleeing the Iraqi city of Mosul which government forces have been battling to retake from Daesh.

Iraqi forces have recaptured most of the country’s second-largest city from the terrorist group in a massive six-month campaign.

But at least 355,000 residents have fled fighting, according to the government, and some 400,000 civilians remain trapped inside the densely-populated Old City where street battles have raged for weeks.

Read: Iraqi military says 61 bodies found in collapsed Mosul building

“We don’t have the resources necessary to support these people,” Guterres told reporters during a visit to the Hassan Sham Camp, one of several centres outside Mosul packed with civilians escaping the fighting.

The UN and Iraqi authorities have been building more camps but struggle to accommodate new arrivals with two families sometimes having to share one tent.

Unfortunately our [aid] programme is only eight per cent funded.

During his visit, which lasted about half an hour, residents complained to Guterres about the quality of drinking water and poor living conditions in tents frequented by mice and insects.

“We want to go back to our villages. We are fed up,” said Saqr Younis, who fled to Mosul when Daesh arrived in his village in 2014.

“If we had died by bombardment it would have been more merciful,” he added. Saqr has been in the camp for four months.

Many of the displaced have returned to their homes in areas retaken from Daesh but some, like Saqr, have not yet been allowed to return by the authorities.