The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

As bullets fell ‘like rain,’ Iraqis victims of ambush

Mosul residents get caught in crossfire between troops, IS.

- By Balint Szlanko

IRBIL, IRAQ — After days of shelling by Iraqi forces, some 200 residents decided to take their chances and flee from one of the last pockets of Mosul controlled by the Islamic State group. They made it as far as a nearby hospital before militant snipers opened fire from the roof, mowing them down by the dozens.

Their harrowing flight, recounted by survivors, illustrate­s the dangers that residents of Iraq’s second-largest city have faced throughout months of heavy fighting as Iraqi forces, backed by a U.S.-led coalition, struggle to drive the militants out.

Many have found themselves caught in the crossfire, with Iraqi artillery and coalition airstrikes on one side, and militants determined to use them as human shields or punish them for leaving on the other.

Riyadh Abdullah, 21, said he and his family, along with about 200 neighbors, had decided to leave their homes last Thursday after days of heavy shelling.

As they neared the hospital, gunmen fired down on them, shooting him in the leg and hitting several others. Iraqi troops nearby then opened fire at the militants.

“There were bullets falling on us like rain,” he said from a hospital bed in the Kurdish regional capital, Irbil.

He remained on the ground, bleeding, for a day and a night. He eventually found a mobile phone in the handbag of a woman who had been killed nearby and called his uncle, who came and dragged him to safety.

He was luckier than most. The road where the civilians were ambushed was still well within range of the militants, hindering rescue efforts.

“For two days there were kids bleeding, no food, no water, under the sun. So the majority died. Nobody came to us. We were shouting but no one came,” he said.

David Eubank, an American medic who works in a field clinic near the front line, said he managed to save two civilians a day after the shooting by getting the Iraqi army to drive a tank onto the road for cover. He said he dragged another five people to safety the following day.

Eubank said his clinic treated about 40 people with gunshot wounds from among those who managed to make it across the road to the Iraqi-controlled area.

There are conflictin­g reports as to how many people died. Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, the U.N. human rights chief, said in Geneva on Tuesday that “at least 163” people were shot and killed, and more were missing.

Col. Hussein Mustafa, the commander of the Iraqi army brigade in the district, estimated that around 150 people were killed.

Iraqi forces have retaken most of Mosul since the offensive began in October, but victory has come at a staggering cost, with heavy casualties among troops and civilians, and hundreds of thousands forced to flee.

“It’s all because of the shelling,” said Ahmed Najm, 27, who is recovering in the Irbil hospital from a shrapnel wound.

He said he lost 13 family members in the shooting.

“The people saw this intensive shelling, this destructio­n, and so they all left their homes. And that’s what caused the massacre,” he said.

U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said that ‘at least 163’ people were killed.

 ?? BALINT SZLANKO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Riyadh Abdullah (left), 27, recovers in a hospital bed Monday in Irbil, Iraq. “For two days there were kids bleeding, no food, no water, under the sun. So the majority died. Nobody came to us,” he said. Jassem Mohammed, 17, is at right.
BALINT SZLANKO / ASSOCIATED PRESS Riyadh Abdullah (left), 27, recovers in a hospital bed Monday in Irbil, Iraq. “For two days there were kids bleeding, no food, no water, under the sun. So the majority died. Nobody came to us,” he said. Jassem Mohammed, 17, is at right.
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