The National - News

Work is a blast for the sappers

Every day is an unexpected challenge for the Kurdish fighters responsibl­e for tackling the dangerous tactics of an enemy skilled in devising more effective and new ways to maim and kill,

- reports foreign correspond­ent Florian Neuhof foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Our approach to work is not to be afraid Lt Col Faxradin Najmaldin In charge of mine-clearing unit on Kirkuk front line

KIRKUK // Lieutenant Colonel Faxradin Najmaldin is no stranger to explosives.

Drafted into Saddam Hussein’s army in 1985, he became a “sapper” – a mine clearing expert – during the Iran-Iraq war.

Since the Kurds began fighting ISIL in June last year, Lt Col Najmaldin and his men – all trained in mine clearance – had to quickly find a new approach to danger, though, as they faced a new type of threat: improvised explosive devices (IEDs), crude, always- changing weapons deployed in great numbers by the militants.

“Before Daesh and Al Qaeda, all mines were known and understood but with Daesh, all the IEDs are different,” says Lt Col Najmaldin, who is in charge of a mine clearing unit on the Kirkuk front line. “This has made our job more difficult.”

Since the Kurds halted the militant group’s advance on Kirkuk in June last year, Lt Col Najmaldin estimates that his sappers have cleared as many as 7,000 IEDs.

“IEDs are the biggest threat we have to deal with when we attack or have liberated territory,” says Gen Araz Abdulkadir, who commands a brigade fighting at Daquq on the Kirkuk front.

ISIL plant roadside bombs and booby trap buildings and terrain to slow the advance of their opponents. The devices are the biggest cause of death and injury inflicted on Kurdish fighters, also known as Peshmerga.

The sappers take pride in their work.

“I joined this unit because IEDs are a big problem and we save the lives of a lot of Peshmerga with what we do,” says Baxtiar Mahmud, a 25-year-old sapper.

Saving the lives of others comes at a high cost.

Lt Col Najmaldin has lost three of his men so far and four more have been seriously wounded.

After the Kurds pushed ISIL back in several offensives around Kirkuk in the spring, the approximat­ely 1,050-kilometre front line has become mostly static. While this has reduced the amount of territory the sappers have to clear, it has not made their job less dangerous.

ISIL seize every opportunit­y to plant their deadly devices, even slipping behind Kurdish lines to lay roadside bombs.

Often the sappers operate directly on the front line, or even in the no man’s land between the lines to clear the way for an assault, exposing them to enemy fire. Mr Mahmud, whose demeanour exudes an unflappabl­e calm, came under sniper fire only two days earlier while trying to clear an IED. He was also targeted last month while trying to defuse a deadly web of wires that connected dozens of explosive devices in a contested village.

Gen Abdulkadir recounts firefights earlier in the year that set ablaze the dry grass in the no man’s land between the two sides. In one such incident, more than 40 IEDs were set off by the heat of the fire, he says.

The devices are mass produced at bombmaking factories scattered around ISIL territory in Iraq.

According to Gen Abdulkadir, coalition air strikes destroyed two such facilities in the Hawiyah Province adjoining Kirkuk last month and the Peshmerga captured another during an offensive in April.

ISIL bombmakers are skilled and innovative, says Lt Col Najmaldin. He believes this is because many of these men learnt to handle explosives while serving in Saddam Hussein’s army. While the charges have remained the same – artillery shells, mortar rounds, cooking pots and canisters filled with home-made explosives – the detonators continue to evolve, posing a dangerous challenge.

The unit does not only have to worry about the ingenuity of ISIL, it also sorely lacks the needed resources to do its job.

The sappers have a handful of US-built armoured cars, which help them get safely to and from the bomb site.

Unfortunat­ely, the vehicles were stripped of the metal grills that protect their sides after they were offloaded in Baghdad, says Lt Col Najmaldin, making them vulnerable to rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs).

An armoured car was recently lost when ISIL managed to disable the vehicle with an RPG, forcing his men to abandon it.

The Kurdish sappers are also short on much basic safety equipment such as body armour and robots, which would allow them to defuse IEDs from a safe distance. The danger, though, is not something Lt Col Najmaldin thinks about much. “Our approach to work is not to be afraid,” he said.

“Because if we are afraid and our hands shake, maybe we’ll make a mistake,” he says.

 ?? Photos Florian Neuhof for The National ?? Lt Col Faxradin Najmaldin, above, shows defused mortar rounds that ISIL turned into IEDs while below are ISIL pressure cookers – pots filled with explosives. The Kurdish officer shows off one of his team’s armoured cars.
Photos Florian Neuhof for The National Lt Col Faxradin Najmaldin, above, shows defused mortar rounds that ISIL turned into IEDs while below are ISIL pressure cookers – pots filled with explosives. The Kurdish officer shows off one of his team’s armoured cars.
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