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Aid groups overrun as refugees flee Mosul

United Nations says ‘overwhelmi­ng’ numbers expected to increase, putting further strain on underfunde­d aid efforts

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MOSUL // Another 200,000 residents are expected to flee the battlegrou­nd city of Mosul in coming weeks as aid agencies struggle to cope with an exodus that has reached an unpreceden­ted level, the United Nations said yesterday.

“The numbers of people fleeing their homes in western Mosul are overwhelmi­ng,” said Lise Grande, UN humanitari­an coordinato­r in Iraq .

“We are talking about very large numbers of families who are leaving everything behind. They are fleeing under very difficult circumstan­ces. Many are food insecure and haven’t had access to safe drinking water and medicines for weeks or months,” she said.

Iraqi forces launched a huge offensive seven months ago to retake the country’s second city from ISIL, which seized it in June 2014. More than 700,000 people have since been displaced, half a million of them since mid-February when Iraqi forces moved against the more densely populated west side of the city. The government, the UN and its partners have been setting up camps around Mosul to assist increasing­ly desperate civilians, including some who faced starvation and were used as human shields by the extremists. But the aid community is struggling to cope with the latest influx, Ms Grande said. “The numbers of people who are moving are now so large, it’s becoming more and more difficult to ensure civilians receive the assistance and protection they need,” she said.

She said that another 200,000 civilians who are still trapped in the Old City of Mosul, where ISIL fighters have focused most of their resources ahead of a bloody last stand, could flee in the coming weeks. Ms Grande urged donors to ramp up support for the Mosul aid effort, which has been hugely underfunde­d so far. “Hundreds of thousands of lives are at stake,” she said.

Civilians are also bearing the brunt of the battle against ISIL in neighbouri­ng Syria, where at least 15 civilians died when the group attacked two government- held villages in Hama province.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said 27 pro-government fighters were also killed in the attacks on Aqareb and Al Mabujeh villages.

The Britain- based monitor said another 10 bodies had yet to be identified, while ISIL lost 15 fighters in the dawn attack.

 ?? Maya Alleruzzo / AP Photo ?? Families in west Mosul bear the brunt of fighting in the city and thousands have no option but to flee.
Maya Alleruzzo / AP Photo Families in west Mosul bear the brunt of fighting in the city and thousands have no option but to flee.

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