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Civilians killed while fleeing Daesh in Mosul

About 700,000 people have already fled Mosul

By Reuters - Jun 03,2017 - Last updated at Jun 03,2017

Displaced Iraqi people who fled from clashes are pictured in western Mosul, Iraq, on Saturday (Reuters photo)

MOSUL, Iraq —The bodies of dozens of civilians killed in the past two days while fleeing a Daesh terror group-held neighbourhood in Mosul lay on Saturday in a street close to the frontline with Iraqi armed forces, a Reuters TV crew reported.

The dead included men, women and children. Bags in which they had carried their belongings were strewn around the road leading out of the Zanjili district, one of three still in the hands of Daesh in Mosul.

"Over the past two days [Daesh] has been shooting people escaping this area," said Dave Eubank from the Free Burma Rangers relief association, referring to Daesh, speaking from a building overlooking the frontline in Zanjili.

"I saw over 50 dead bodies yesterday, we worked with the Americans to get smoke and an Iraqi tank, and followed behind them and we rescued one little girl and one man," he told Reuters. "But there are still more."

Hundreds of others managed to reach the government lines, some wounded and some carrying apparently dead bodies in blankets, crying and shouting. A man carried an unconscious child.

From a building close to the spot where the civilians were killed, a man could be seen hiding behind a wall, trying to find a way out with the help of an Iraqi soldier who came to the rescue.

A young man said he was wounded in the hand a few days ago when an air strike hit a group of civilians collecting water because a Daesh militant was hiding among them.

"We were a group of 200-250 civilians, a Daesh came in amongst us and the aviator hit us, we were all hurt but he [the militant] escaped," he said.

Iraqi government forces retook eastern Mosul in January and began a new push on May 27 to capture the remaining Daesh-held enclave in the western side of the city, where about 200,000 people are trapped in harrowing conditions. 

The Mosul offensive started in October with air and ground support from a US-led international coalition. It has taken much longer than expected. 

The fall of Mosul would, in effect, mark the end of the Iraqi half of the "caliphate" declared in 2014 over parts of Iraq and Syria by Daesh leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi.

About 700,000 people, about a third of the pre-war population of Mosul, have already fled, seeking refuge either with friends and relatives or in camps.

 

In Syria, Kurdish forces backed by US-air strikes are besieging Daesh forces in the city of Raqqa, the militants' de facto capital in that country.

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