Waterloo Region Record

Canada calls for more aid as civilians flee from Mosul

- Lee Berthiaume

OTTAWA — Canada has added its voice to calls for the internatio­nal community to do more as aid groups brace for a potential humanitari­an crisis near the Iraqi city of Mosul.

Iraqi and Kurdish forces this week launched a massive assault on Iraq’s second-largest city to free it from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The operation had been expected for months and is seen as a pivotal moment in the fight to defeat ISIL.

In anticipati­on of the attack, the UN as well as a number of aid groups have been pre-positionin­g supplies for months to deal with an expected flood of civilians fleeing the fighting. Mosul is home to an estimated 1.2 million people.

But those efforts have been marred by a shortage of funding. The UN asked the internatio­nal community in July for $284 million in aid for the Mosul offensive, but less than half has been pledged.

Canada is the fifth-largest donor of humanitari­an assistance to Iraq, after the United States, U.K., Germany and European Commission, according to the UN. That includes $150 million in humanitari­an assistance promised in July.

Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau said the money, to be spread over three years, is going to groups such as the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross and Oxfam to use as needed.

While not earmarked specifical­ly for Mosul, she said some has already been used to support preparatio­ns for the Mosul attack.

That includes providing emergency food rations through the World Food Programme and ICRC and helping the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration with camps and emergency shelter.

But while touting Canada’s contributi­on, Bibeau said much more is needed from the internatio­nal community to prevent a tragedy.

“Civilians under siege are likely to be at the highest risk of hunger, lack of medical assistance and human rights violations,” she said. “This is a global responsibi­lity and all donors must step up to respond to what is now unfolding in Mosul.”

The request for funding and advanced preparatio­ns were a direct result of the catastroph­e in Fallujah earlier this year.

Humanitari­ans groups were overwhelme­d as tens of thousands of people fled the city into the surroundin­g countrysid­e to escape fighting between Iraqi and ISIL forces.

Aid workers on the ground have not yet seen a rush of civilians from Mosul since the operation to free the city only started on Monday. They say the fighting has so far been focused on largely abandoned villages around the city.

“For us, we expect the big influx when the fighting gets to the city,” Oxfam’s country director in Iraq, Andres Gonzalez Rodriguez, said from Erbil. “The worst is yet to come.”

The UN says it is ready to accommodat­e up to 60,000 people in 27 camps and emergency sites scattered around Mosul, but it estimates that as many as 200,000 could flee during the first two weeks of the battle.

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