Los Angeles Times

‘Where are they going to stay?’

Iraqis are pouring out of war-ravaged Mosul, overwhelmi­ng camps for the displaced.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com Twitter: @mollyhf

HAMAM ALIL, Iraq — They camp on muddy corners, beside an abandoned mosque and in the rainsoaked ruins of a soccer stadium — families displaced by ongoing fighting in Mosul are filling emergency camps in this smaller city about 20 miles south.

Disabled boys arrived in wheelchair­s, and elderly men limped in on metal braces and canes.

Ashraf Mohammed Nouri came clutching his wide-eyed, 11-month-old daughter, Manara. Most of their family, including Manara’s mother, had been killed when their house was struck during fighting in west Mosul a week earlier, Nouri said. His mother had been hospitaliz­ed on the city’s east side.

“We don’t know what happened to her,” Nouri said of his mother as he awaited security screening at the camp entrance. “I just want to go and see my family.”

An estimated 400,000 Iraqi civilians remain trapped in Mosul’s western Old City as fighting intensifie­s and people continue to flee, United Nations officials warned.

“The worst is yet to come,” said Bruno Geddo, the United Nations high commission­er for refugees’ Iraq representa­tive.

Meeting with civilians at the UNHCR camp at Hamam Alil, Geddo said the number of people moving through has “surged” in recent days with up to 12,000 arriving daily.

More than 350,000 people have been displaced since the fighting in Mosul started in October, and up to 500,000 could flee by the time it’s over, according to Iraqi and United Nations officials.

During a visit to a displaced persons camp east of Mosul on Friday, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged the world to do more to help those who have “suffered enormously and go on suffering.”

“This is a moment in which the Iraqi people, the people of Mosul, need the solidarity of the internatio­nal community,” Guterres said.

Aid agencies warned at the start of the Mosul offensive that hundreds of thousands could flee the fighting. Instead, many families on the east side initially sheltered in place, and those who did flee found shelter at hastily erected emergency camps.

Now, however, with fighting intensifyi­ng as troops move deeper into the more densely populated west side, shortages abound and the exodus has accelerate­d, with some arriving barefoot and bereft, straining Hamam Alil.

After more than 200 civilians were killed in what witnesses described as an airstrike, the U.S.-led coalition opened an investigat­ion into whether it was responsibl­e, and U.N. officials expressed concern for the welfare of civilians trapped in the city.

“Nothing in this conflict is more important than protecting civilians,” said Lise Grande, the U.N.’s humanitari­an coordinato­r for Iraq. “Parties to the conflict — all parties — are obliged to do everything possible to protect civilians. This means that combatants cannot use people as human shields and cannot imperil lives through indiscrimi­nate use of firepower.”

The camp in Hamam Alil, like many surroundin­g Mosul, was quickly erected to provide the bare essentials: a fence for security, shelter under hundreds of white family tents, larger group tents designed to hold 150 people temporaril­y, and latrines, all lined up along dirt roads that quickly turn to mud when it rains.

One week last month, 45,000 west Mosul residents were displaced — a 22% jump from the previous week, according to the United Nations.

In late March, 215,306 displaced people were housed at 22 camps and emergency sites in the Mosul area, with an additional eight sites under constructi­on, according to figures from the U.N., Institute of Migration and camp managers. Eight of those camps were full, including Hamam Alil, which housed 30,000.

And those figures don’t include thousands of others who have passed through Hamam Alil to other locations or stayed at informal settlement­s outside the camps, like the ruins of a mosque and soccer stadium.

“There are tents waiting,” said Heidi Diedrich, Iraq country director for the Norwegian Refugee Council, which runs the camp in Hamam Alil and has increased aid in recent weeks along with other nonprofits. “Although many people are choosing to stay elsewhere, we are also trying to meet the needs of these people.”

Melany Markham, a spokeswoma­n for the Norwegian Refugee Council, was at the camp recently and spoke with some of those settled just outside its gates.

“It’s complicate­d because all of the people who are displaced make their own decisions,” she said later. “For example, I met a 12year-old boy and they have a lot of livestock, which they can’t have in the camp. So they’re staying by the mosque.”

There are other reasons why displaced families may wait to be housed at the same camp, she said: “There are ethnic and religious groups, or neighbors, who just want to say together.”

After Abdul Hadi Mohammed, 52, hobbled out of west Mosul with his Sunni family, his right leg injured by shrapnel from a mortar round, he was treated at a clinic in Hamam Alil but then chose to leave in an attempt to rejoin relatives at a camp in east Mosul.

He arrived to find Kurdish soldiers steering him to a different camp. Mohammed balked. His family ended up stuck at a military checkpoint.

“We don’t know if there is space or not,” Mohammed said as he waited on crutches by the side of the road.

The Iraqi government revised its estimate of those expected to be displaced from west Mosul from 250,000 to 400,000, and expects the daily rate of displaceme­nt to exceed 10,000. Prime Minister Haider Abadi announced initiative­s to address the crisis, including increases in personnel, transporta­tion and funding for the Iraqi Red Crescent Society.

An extension of the Hamam Alil camp under constructi­on nearby is expected to double its capacity, Markham said. New camp constructi­on around Mosul is expected to create shelter for nearly 276,000 additional displaced people.

Outside one of scores of tents at the Hamam Alil camp housing 150 people each, Ghanim Mohammed said he barely managed to flee west Mosul last month with his two children.

“We were in the crossfire between Islamic State and the [Iraqi] army. It was a miracle that we escaped,” he said.

The 26-year-old laborer wasn’t sure where they would go next, since their home was destroyed by mortar rounds. He was grateful for his spot in the tent, near a World Health Organizati­on mobile clinic, portable bathrooms and food distributi­on. He knows other families squatting in the ruins of nearby buildings, which have not been fully cleared of bombs planted by militants.

He and camp staff pointed to a building where a family had been staying. They accidental­ly triggered a bomb and died.

Just up the street, 38 displaced people — including more than a dozen children — camped under the concrete ruins of the soccer stadium stands. They had arrived the day before, cordoned off an area the size of two rooms with rope, bedsheets and comforters, then covered the ground with cardboard boxes.

“We feel secure in the area because police are around and they are protecting us,” said Samir Taha Tahsin, 42, although police had not told him about the dangers of hidden explosives.

He and other farmers in his group planned to rent cars and leave soon, once they replaced identifica­tion paperwork they lost in Mosul that will help them clear security checkpoint­s. Islamic State militants had forced them into the city almost two years ago from their native Samarra to the south, they said, then from neighborho­od to neighborho­od. They still have land and want to return home.

They were receiving food from the camp next door, using the bathrooms and clinic. They worried others f leeing in coming days would receive even less than they have.

“Many families are still in Mosul. Many neighborho­ods have not been freed yet. If they come here, where are they going to stay?” Tahsin said.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? AT THE HAMAM ALIL camp, people who fled the fighting in Mosul, Iraq, try to push their way onto a bus headed for another displaced persons camp.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times AT THE HAMAM ALIL camp, people who fled the fighting in Mosul, Iraq, try to push their way onto a bus headed for another displaced persons camp.

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