Los Angeles Times

Toxic oil field and sulfur fires

- molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com

has left more than 20,000 people stranded here near the west bank of the Tigris River, caught between the advancing army and Islamic State holdouts who have left an apocalypti­c twilight of burning oil fields and toxic fumes in their wake.

The destructio­n of the sulfur plant has engulfed the area in rotten egg fumes. The oil field fires were first set months ago, both to obscure the terrain from potential airstrikes and to render the oil wells — which Islamic State had been using to finance its religious empire — useless for any new conquerors.

A wave of kidnapping­s and executions has also accompanie­d the militants’ violent retreat.

Mohammed Said Mohammed, 24, who was picking his way through the graveyard Wednesday, said he has lost five uncles to Islamic State attacks, three executed at once. One of his brothers, Muaataz, 36, a soldier, died trying to defend Mosul from Islamic State in 2014.

Now Mohammed was standing next to the fresh grave of another brother, Faras, 40, shot in a nearby village with more than 20 other civilians on Oct. 17, the day Iraqi forces and their allies launched the offensive to recapture Mosul.

“They broke the doors and killed them. They killed some women. They killed children 10, 8 years old. We saw their bodies with our own eyes,” Mohammed said. “They kill civilians and run away.”

Gases from the sulfur plant sickened hundreds of residents who sought treatment this week at a local clinic, according to staffer Khalil Ibrahim Jasim. He distribute­d 1,500 protective masks.

“Now we don’t have any,” he said, and they didn’t have oxygen either: The area had been without electricit­y for days as a result of Islamic State attacks nearby.

Jasim said military officials had promised to address the problem in a few days, but nothing had been done.

The sulfur and oil field fire plumes, massive clouds of noxious black and white smoke, blotted out the area on satellite maps. The oily haze has turned everything gray: children’s T-shirts, women’s head scarves, old men’s skullcaps, even the sheep.

Almost everyone in town seems to have oily hands, “as if we are working with cars,” said Esam Najim, 21, a student in an Emirates soccer jersey who managed to score one of the scarce blue medical masks at the local clinic.

“Sometimes we need to shower four, five times a day” to get rid of the residue, said Shayma Jasim, 29, a mother of five who said the sulfur plant fire sickened her 10year-old. Businesses in the area are still open, but residents are wary of meat hanging outside the butcher shop, of the pomegranat­es and eggplants piled in front of AlMuqtar Market.

“We are worried about everything: our food, our water. Even our plants died,” said Abdel Salam, 30, a father of three who runs the market.

Abdul Rahman Ali, 42, previously moved his family of five — the youngest just a year old — away from the burning oil fields to his father’s house across from Qayyarah. Then came the sulfur plant fire.

“Whenever there is an advance by the army, Islamic State is taking revenge: destroying things, executing people or taking them as human shields,” said Ali, who was waiting in a food distributi­on line Wednesday with scores of others.

He said his cousin in Lazaka, the same Sunni village where Mohammed’s brother was killed, was also executed by Islamic State last week.

The militant group has carried out executions in several villages to the south of Mosul since the offensive began, Rupert Colville, spokesman for the United Nations high commission­er for human rights, said at a briefing this week in Geneva.

Militants killed 15 civilians in the village of Safina, about 30 miles south of Mosul, throwing their bodies into a river.

They tied a dozen men’s hands to a vehicle and dragged them around the village before beating them with sticks and gun butts, Colville said.

Last week, Iraqi security forces reportedly discovered the bodies of 70 civilian shooting victims in houses in Tuloul Naser village, 20 miles south of Mosul.

On Saturday, three women and three young girls were fatally shot by militants, and four children were wounded, in Rufeila, another village south of Mosul. They had been lagging behind a group that was being forcibly relocated, slowed by one of the children who was disabled, Colville said.

In Qayyarah, Sumaya Khalid Abed, 42, has had to care for her family alone since her husband, a police major, was kidnapped by Islamic State two years ago and held near Mosul. Now she worries that as the offensive advances, he could be killed.

Back at the cemetery, Hamdan sat next to the graves of her nephews, surrounded by others who had survived the sulfur plant attack. The sun was setting, but they could barely see it through the gray mist.

Hamdan, 55, said she hopes Iraqi soldiers are careful to scour surroundin­g villages and rid them of militants before they can do more harm.

“The army came to free us,” she said, “And we are stuck between them.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? IRAQIS in Qayyarah, south of Mosul, wait for the distributi­on of food and water. Fires set by Islamic State militants to foil any invaders have left an oily haze and turned everything gray: children’s T-shirts, women’s head scarves, old men’s skullcaps, even the sheep.
Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times IRAQIS in Qayyarah, south of Mosul, wait for the distributi­on of food and water. Fires set by Islamic State militants to foil any invaders have left an oily haze and turned everything gray: children’s T-shirts, women’s head scarves, old men’s skullcaps, even the sheep.
 ??  ?? TROOPS drive through Qayyarah, where toxic fumes from fires set by militants f leeing Iraq’s Mosul offensive have sickened people and killed poultry and sheep.
TROOPS drive through Qayyarah, where toxic fumes from fires set by militants f leeing Iraq’s Mosul offensive have sickened people and killed poultry and sheep.

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