Arab News

Ramadan comes with bitter taste for families of Iraq’s Mosul

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MOSUL: For Umm Mohammed and other residents of areas of war-battered west Mosul recaptured from Daesh militants, this year’s holy month of Ramadan carries a bitter taste.

“Our homes and cars have been destroyed, our family separated,” said the former bank manager in Iraq’s second largest city. “Why should we have to wait here in this long queue to get aid?”

“We used to have a dream life and we’ve fallen all the way down to the bottom,” said the 38-yearold mother of two, declining to give her full name for fear of reprisals against family members left behind in districts still under militant control.

Daesh seized the northern city of Mosul in June 2014 and imposed a brutal form of rule and a regime of terror on its inhabitant­s.

Life has been made even harder since the battle launched last October by Iraqi security forces to drive out Daesh. East Mosul and a large part of the west are now back in government hands.

In their no-holds-barred defense, the militants have used civilians — caught in the crossfire and already the victims of food, water and electricit­y shortages — as human shields.

“I break the (dawn-to-dusk Ramadan) fast with whatever I can find. Sometimes we even find sand and worms in the water we have to drink,” said Umm Mohammed.

She was among the women, children and the elderly standing in line amid the rubble of pulverized buildings and the carcasses of burned-out cars, many of them protecting their heads from the blistering sun with towels or rags.

Another mother, Umm Yussef, stood nearby in tears, having failed to add her name to the list compiled daily of those entitled to the aid packages of rice, lentils, milk, sugar, tomato juice and cheese.

“I have 10 children. We break the fast just with water from the well and tomato juice. What sort of life is this?” she asked, her voice tinged with both sorrow and anger.

Umm Yussef said she would celebrate the Eid feast that follows the holy month — at the end of next week — only once her daughter Leila and their family are “freed from Daesh control.”

“All they have to eat is grass and sand,” she said as a passerby handed a biscuit to one of her children.

Young volunteers last week handed out 2,000 modest aid packages to inhabitant­s of areas of west Mosul recaptured by Iraqi forces.

“We try to meet a modest part of the needs of needy families,” said 21-year-old Mohammed Dilan, one of those distributi­ng the aid raised from donations by businessme­n and other individual­s.

For those displaced from Mosul and forced to take refuge in overcrowde­d camps outside the city, life can be even more treacherou­s.

A mass food poisoning this week at one such camp, Hasansham, left hundreds requiring urgent treatment, officials said Tuesday.

Health Ministry spokesman Seif Al-Badr said around 100 of those affected required serious treatment after the “iftar” meal, which breaks the fast.

More than 800,000 people have been forced to flee their homes since the battle for Mosul erupted.

 ??  ?? Displaced Iraqis receive food aid during the holy month of Ramadan at Al-Khazir camp for the internally displaced, located between Arbil and Mosul. (AFP)
Displaced Iraqis receive food aid during the holy month of Ramadan at Al-Khazir camp for the internally displaced, located between Arbil and Mosul. (AFP)

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