Truro News

‘The army is coming’

Thousands being used as human shields near Mosul: UN

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For three months, as Islamic State militants ranged across farms and villages south of Mosul, they took Sayid Naheer, his wife and eight children with them. The family was among tens of thousands of people that the UN says have been rounded up to be used as human shields.

Their forced march covered more than 20 kilometres, stopping in villages for days or weeks. When Naheer’s family finally escaped this week after an air raid and made it to a government checkpoint near the front lines, the children’s faces were caked with dust and their feet had been rubbed raw by their plastic sandals.

The UN human rights office said Friday that the tens of thousands of civilians were in the town of Hamam al-Alil, south of Mosul, doubling its population to an estimated 60,000.

The Associated Press reported earlier this week that IS militants had gone door to door in villages

south of Mosul, ordering hundreds of people at gunpoint to march north into the city, the largest under their control. Mosul is the focus of a massive Iraqi military offensive launched Oct. 17 against the extremists.

“They said, ‘the army is coming, and they will kill you and rape your women, so you must

come with us,”’ Naheer said of the IS militants. He and his family were held in abandoned homes, and were allowed to bring their sheep along for food.

Then on Thursday, a volley of airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition pounded the fighters’ positions. “They all just fled, ran away and left us,” he said.

There was no way to independen­tly confirm the account but it tracks with those given by other witnesses to the forced displaceme­nt who have spoken to the AP in the past week. A U.S. general said thousands have been rounded up, and that the coalition airstrikes are trying to disrupt the militants without harming civilians.

In Hamam al-Alil, the militants separated former members of the security forces from women and children, and took both groups onward to Mosul, the UN said.

The fighters killed 190 former security forces Wednesday at the Ghazlani military base on the southern edge of Mosul, while 42 civilians were killed at another base for refusing to join IS. Another 24 people were reportedly shot to death Tuesday, the UN added.

The extremist group has massacred perceived opponents on several occasions since it swept across northern and central Iraq in 2014, often circulatin­g photos and video of the killings and boasting about them online.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Displaced Iraqis wait for a ride at a checkpoint in Qayara, some 50 kilometres south of Mosul, Iraq.
AP PHOTO Displaced Iraqis wait for a ride at a checkpoint in Qayara, some 50 kilometres south of Mosul, Iraq.

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