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Families from Iraq’s Fallujah flee one hell to find another

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They fled starvation and jihadist tyranny in Fallujah for the safety of displacement camps but thousands of Iraqi families still have nothing to eat and nowhere to sleep.

"The government told us to leave our homes, so we did. The way they described it, we were going to find heaven," said Ayyub Yusef, a 32-year-old from Fallujah.

"I don't regret leaving because we would have died there. Here, we are alive, just about, but it's really just another kind of hell," he said.

Yusef, his wife and two children are among the tens of thousands of Fallujah residents who have fled the government's operation against the Islamic State (IS) group in the city.

More than 60,000 people have been forced from their homes in the area over the past month and a sudden influx of civilians pouring out of the city centre last week has left the aid community unable to cope.

Iraq: the battle for Fallujah
Iraq: the battle for Fallujah
Valentina BRESCHI, Thomas SAINT-CRICQ, AFP

Yusef's family was rejected from several camps that were already full and washed up on the shores of Lake Habbaniyah, where yet another camp was being erected.

He had not been given a tent yet and had been left to sleep outside with his family for four nights.

"My parents finally got a tent in another camp, so we will try to reach them to sleep with them tonight," he said.

As the blistering sun set on the lake, once a coveted holiday spot in Iraq, men swarmed round a truck to collect tent poles and tarpaulins.

"We were expecting some kind of accommodation at least but we were given nothing. Now we have to erect our own tents," said 49-year-old Taresh Farhan, banging on the canvas and poles with his fist to straighten them out.

- No latrines -

One young woman was furious.

Displaced Iraqis in a camp in Habbaniyah
Displaced Iraqis in a camp in Habbaniyah
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

"We had to live through the tyranny of Daesh (IS) and now it's just another injustice," she said, declining to give her name.

"Five days here and nothing to eat, not even a bottle of water... This camp is just like the rest of Iraq, if you don't have connections, you will get nothing," she said.

"Shame on them, there is no bathroom for the women... We have to go in the desert," said the woman, her eyes blazing with rage through the slit of her niqab face veil.

At another, rapidly expanding camp in Khaldiyeh further along the shores of Lake Habbaniyah, an NGO called Preemptive Love Coalition delivered basic foods.

Displaced Iraqis put up tents in a camp in Habbaniyah
Displaced Iraqis put up tents in a camp in Habbaniyah
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

For many of the recently displaced Fallujah residents there, it was the first distribution they had seen.

They queued patiently as gusts of warm wind cloaked the camp in orange dust.

"The last days in Fallujah, we were cutting grass in the street to eat it," said Hamde Bedi, a 41-year-old woman pregnant with her eighth child.

Her family had been displaced several times over since the launch of the government's offensive to retake the IS bastion a month ago.

- 'Catastrophe' -

People who have fled Fallujah are at angry at having to erect their own tents
People who have fled Fallujah are at angry at having to erect their own tents
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory last week after the national flag was raised above the main government compound.

Security forces continue to battle jihadists in northern neighbourhoods of the city but the biggest crisis the government faces now is humanitarian.

"What we're seeing is the consequence of a delayed and heavily underfunded response with an extreme toll on the civilians fleeing from one nightmare and living through another one," the Iraq chief of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Nasr Muflahi, said on Tuesday.

"Fallujah may have been retaken but its citizens are facing a catastrophe," he said.

More than 60 000 people have been forced from their homes in the Fallujah area over the past month
More than 60,000 people have been forced from their homes in the Fallujah area over the past month
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

Many of the most recently displaced families are without their men, who are often kept for days by the security forces for screening because IS members have been trying to sneak out by blending in with fleeing civilians.

Hamde's husband Yasser was released on Sunday after four days.

"We had managed to flee the Jolan neighbourhood because my wife is in the final stages of pregnancy. We asked Daesh (IS) permission to go to hospital and they agreed," he said.

"When we got out of hospital, we didn't return and we fled. We walked for seven hours. I had to carry my wife across canals. We were also carrying my disabled son," Yasser Abed said.

"We saw families getting blown up by Daesh's roadside bombs ahead of us as we fled. Now we are here, with nothing to eat and no money and we are expecting a baby," he said.

"I hope it's a girl."

They fled starvation and jihadist tyranny in Fallujah for the safety of displacement camps but thousands of Iraqi families still have nothing to eat and nowhere to sleep.

“The government told us to leave our homes, so we did. The way they described it, we were going to find heaven,” said Ayyub Yusef, a 32-year-old from Fallujah.

“I don’t regret leaving because we would have died there. Here, we are alive, just about, but it’s really just another kind of hell,” he said.

Yusef, his wife and two children are among the tens of thousands of Fallujah residents who have fled the government’s operation against the Islamic State (IS) group in the city.

More than 60,000 people have been forced from their homes in the area over the past month and a sudden influx of civilians pouring out of the city centre last week has left the aid community unable to cope.

Iraq: the battle for Fallujah

Iraq: the battle for Fallujah
Valentina BRESCHI, Thomas SAINT-CRICQ, AFP

Yusef’s family was rejected from several camps that were already full and washed up on the shores of Lake Habbaniyah, where yet another camp was being erected.

He had not been given a tent yet and had been left to sleep outside with his family for four nights.

“My parents finally got a tent in another camp, so we will try to reach them to sleep with them tonight,” he said.

As the blistering sun set on the lake, once a coveted holiday spot in Iraq, men swarmed round a truck to collect tent poles and tarpaulins.

“We were expecting some kind of accommodation at least but we were given nothing. Now we have to erect our own tents,” said 49-year-old Taresh Farhan, banging on the canvas and poles with his fist to straighten them out.

– No latrines –

One young woman was furious.

Displaced Iraqis in a camp in Habbaniyah

Displaced Iraqis in a camp in Habbaniyah
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

“We had to live through the tyranny of Daesh (IS) and now it’s just another injustice,” she said, declining to give her name.

“Five days here and nothing to eat, not even a bottle of water… This camp is just like the rest of Iraq, if you don’t have connections, you will get nothing,” she said.

“Shame on them, there is no bathroom for the women… We have to go in the desert,” said the woman, her eyes blazing with rage through the slit of her niqab face veil.

At another, rapidly expanding camp in Khaldiyeh further along the shores of Lake Habbaniyah, an NGO called Preemptive Love Coalition delivered basic foods.

Displaced Iraqis put up tents in a camp in Habbaniyah

Displaced Iraqis put up tents in a camp in Habbaniyah
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

For many of the recently displaced Fallujah residents there, it was the first distribution they had seen.

They queued patiently as gusts of warm wind cloaked the camp in orange dust.

“The last days in Fallujah, we were cutting grass in the street to eat it,” said Hamde Bedi, a 41-year-old woman pregnant with her eighth child.

Her family had been displaced several times over since the launch of the government’s offensive to retake the IS bastion a month ago.

– ‘Catastrophe’ –

People who have fled Fallujah are at angry at having to erect their own tents

People who have fled Fallujah are at angry at having to erect their own tents
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory last week after the national flag was raised above the main government compound.

Security forces continue to battle jihadists in northern neighbourhoods of the city but the biggest crisis the government faces now is humanitarian.

“What we’re seeing is the consequence of a delayed and heavily underfunded response with an extreme toll on the civilians fleeing from one nightmare and living through another one,” the Iraq chief of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Nasr Muflahi, said on Tuesday.

“Fallujah may have been retaken but its citizens are facing a catastrophe,” he said.

More than 60 000 people have been forced from their homes in the Fallujah area over the past month

More than 60,000 people have been forced from their homes in the Fallujah area over the past month
Haidar Mohammed Ali, AFP

Many of the most recently displaced families are without their men, who are often kept for days by the security forces for screening because IS members have been trying to sneak out by blending in with fleeing civilians.

Hamde’s husband Yasser was released on Sunday after four days.

“We had managed to flee the Jolan neighbourhood because my wife is in the final stages of pregnancy. We asked Daesh (IS) permission to go to hospital and they agreed,” he said.

“When we got out of hospital, we didn’t return and we fled. We walked for seven hours. I had to carry my wife across canals. We were also carrying my disabled son,” Yasser Abed said.

“We saw families getting blown up by Daesh’s roadside bombs ahead of us as we fled. Now we are here, with nothing to eat and no money and we are expecting a baby,” he said.

“I hope it’s a girl.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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