Oman Daily Observer

‘I’ve never seen such war’, says 90-year-old rescued from Mosul

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MOSUL: Ninety-year-old Khatla Ali Abdallah has survived decades of turbulence in northern Iraq, but the frail grandmothe­r who fled the battle for Mosul this week says the fighting there is the worst she has ever seen.

Carried across the desert by her grandsons, under sniper and mortar fire, she was one of thousands who braved the difficult and dangerous journey out of IS’s shrinking stronghold in the west of the city.

“I’m a 90-year-old woman and I haven’t seen such a war,” she said in a camp for displaced people south of Mosul, where she was taken by Iraqi security forces.

Khatla lived through Saddam Hussein’s quarter century in power, when Iraq fought wars with neighbouri­ng Iran and Kuwait and endured a decade of devastatin­g sanctions. That was followed by a US-led invasion which toppled Saddam and led to years of sectarian war across the country.

“Even under the Saddam era, we were afraid because of the atrocities and the people killed,” she said. “But nothing is compared to this phase”.

Since the launch of the military campaign in October to retake Mosul from IS, Khatla remained in her home in the city’s southweste­rn Al Mamoun district, now in the hands of Iraq’s US-backed Counter Terrorism Service (CTS).

At times she took shelter in her basement with the 20 chickens that she looked after — reminders, she said, of her youth when she also herded sheep and cattle.

“I haven’t lost any chickens, not even a one little chick,” she said. “We were trapped in the basement and we could hear the bullets hitting the metal roof of the chicken pen.”

Her grandsons carried her for miles in the desert to reach the CTS lines, and then she was taken on a bus to a camp for internally displaced people.

“We just want to make it through this war,” she said. “This one will make stories for generation­s to tell.”

Five children and two women are receiving treatment for exposure to chemical agents near Mosul, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said on Friday.

The ICRC “condemns in the strongest possible terms the use of chemical weapons during fighting around the Iraqi city of Mosul”, it said in a statement.

The organisati­on said it did not know which side used the chemical agents that caused blisters, redness in the eyes, irritation, vomiting, and coughing. The United States has warned that could use weapons containing IS sulfur mustard agents to repel the offensive on the northern Iraqi city.

ICRC medical teams were supporting local medical teams treating the seven patients, who were admitted over the past two days to Rozhawa hospital in Erbil, east of Mosul, the organisati­on said.

The ICRC had reinforced 13 medical centres in areas surroundin­g Mosul with capacity to treat gas attacks victims, ahead of the offensive that started in October.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Khatla Ali Abdullah, 90, is embraced as she flees her home as Iraqi forces battle with IS militants in western Mosul on February 27.
— Reuters Khatla Ali Abdullah, 90, is embraced as she flees her home as Iraqi forces battle with IS militants in western Mosul on February 27.

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