Gulf News

Iraqi woman fends for 22 grandchild­ren

Without death certificat­es for two of her five sons killed by Daesh, she can’t apply for their pensions

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Iraqi grandmothe­r Sana Ebrahim Al Taee has a full-time job feeding and clothing her 22 grandchild­ren after Daesh killed their fathers — her sons — a struggle in a cramped flat with little help from the state.

Al Taee and her husband, who has Alzheimer’s, share their four-room apartment in eastern Mosul with the children, aged between two and 16, their daughter and two of their sons’ widows.

Rent, food, clothes and schooling depend on donations and charity handouts.

Al Taee is waiting to hear if the government will provide pensions of 500,000 Iraqi dinars (Dh1,541) a month for her sons, who worked in the military and police.

“I hope that the authoritie­s will give pensions and housing for those orphans, because I am not going to live for 100 years,” the 60-year-old told Reuters.

Listed as missing

Al Taee, who is in poor health with vocal cord paralysis, has provided death certificat­es for three sons but said the other two were buried in mass, unmarked graves and she has not been able to find their bodies.

That means they are classed as missing rather than dead so she has no death certificat­es for them and cannot apply for their pensions — a common problem for families in the north and west of the country where Daesh controlled vast swaths of territory in 2014.

The militants were driven out in December, but the government has said it will need up to $100 billion to rebuild the cities with Mosul’s mosques, churches, markets and other landmarks left in ruin.

“When Daesh militants seized our areas, they destroyed us. By God, the militants humiliated us. They killed our sons and nothing has remained,” Al Taee said.

The two widows living in the cramped home had been working for local civil organisati­ons but left after not being paid. They are now looking for work as servants.

When Daesh militants seized our areas, they destroyed us. By God, the militants humiliated us. They killed our sons and nothing has remained.”

Sana Ebrahim Al Taee | Iraqi woman

 ?? Reuters ?? Sana Ebrahim Al Taee, who is in poor health with vocal cord paralysis, with her grandchild­ren at her home in Mosul.
Reuters Sana Ebrahim Al Taee, who is in poor health with vocal cord paralysis, with her grandchild­ren at her home in Mosul.

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