Skip to main content

Fight for survival in Mosul especially tough for children and those with disabilities

Young children are treated at a first-aid station in the Gogjali neighbourhood of Eastern Mosul after they were injured by a mortar round
Young children are treated at a first-aid station in the Gogjali neighbourhood of Eastern Mosul after they were injured by a mortar round while trying to flee their homes. Photo by UNHCR/Ivor Prickett

QAYMAWA CAMP, Kurdistan Region of Iraq – Fatima Mehamed is 94 and can no longer walk. She also suffers from constant chest pain. Sitting on the floor of a darkened tent in Qaymawa Camp in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI), Fatima and her family are nine of over 73,000 Iraqis forced to flee their homes in Mosul and surrounding regions.

Before they fled from their village just north of Mosul, Fatima’s family struggled to stay alive in their home. “I sat my mother on a rug because she couldn’t move,” says Fatima’s daughter and caregiver, 48-year old Fathiya. “As we heard shelling and the sounds of gunfire all around us, I pulled her from room to room to protect her from bullets that might come through the window.”

Iraqi IDPs, mainly from Gogjali on the Eastern outskirts of Mosul, arrive at the UNHCR run Hasansham camp.
Iraqi IDPs, mainly from Gogjali on the Eastern outskirts of Mosul, arrive at the UNHCR run Hasansham camp, which opened in light of the huge number of arrivals in the past 24 hours. Image: Photo by UNHCR/Ivor Prickett.

On October 17, U.S.-backed Iraqi government troops and Kurdish security forces began a massive offensive to drive Islamic State fighters from Mosul, the group’s last major stronghold in the country. The result is a major displacement of Iraqis fleeing the fighting, many of whom have been surviving under brutal militant rule for two years.

With six camps already built, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) is planning for a total of 11 camps, with a capacity of 120,000 people. The Agency says that more land and further funding must be found to shelter and feed traumatized displaced residents.

Although she is happy to be safe in the camp, Fatima’s disability makes an already harsh and spare existence—living in a basic tent with communal washrooms—even more of a struggle. That struggle is heightened by the fact that it is now winter—tents are often coated with ice during the night.

Iraqi internally displaced people (IDPs) in the village of Shora.
Iraqi internally displaced people (IDPs) in the village of Shora, 25km South of Mosul, reach an Iraqi army checkpoint on the Northern outskirts of Qayyarah. Qayyarah was liberated from ISIS over two months ago but is still engulfed in thick black smoke from oil wells set ablaze by the retreating militants. IDPs who reach Qayyarah are taken to Ja'dah IDP camp. Photo by UNHCR/Ivor Prickett.

“It is difficult to look after my mother here,” says Fathiya. “My sister and I have to carry her to the toilet and she hasn’t had a shower since we arrived.” The family had a wheelchair, but it broke down, and at $200 U.S., a new one is financially out of reach.

When the Qaymawa Camp first opened in October 2016, UNHCR identified more than 20 people with disabilities. More than 4,500 people now live there, with more arriving every day.

“UNHCR protection officers are currently making a map of the camp to identify those with special needs, so we, along with the Department of Health and other NGOs, can properly respond, including the distribution of wheelchairs,” says Djamal Zamoum, UNHCR Senior Emergency Field Co-ordinator in Iraq.

Iraqi IDPs displaced by fighting in the village of Shora, 25km South of Mosul.
Iraqi IDPs displaced by fighting in the village of Shora, 25km South of Mosul, reach an Iraqi army checkpoint on the Northern outskirts of Qayyarah. Qayyarah was liberated from ISIS over two months ago but is still engulfed in thick black smoke from oil wells set ablaze by the retreating militants. IDPs who reach Qayyarah are taken to Ja'dah IDP camp there. Photo by UNHCR/Ivor Prickett.

Fathiya believes that even small measures would help her mother, and other disabled people.

“It would really help if we had a mobile toilet for her, and if there was an empty tent with a bucket of water where my sister and I could wash her,” she says. “My mother misses the light. She asks me to take her out so she can see people and enjoy some fresh air. But it isn’t possible,” she adds.

UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency, is a lifeline for people displaced by violence, conflict and persecution—helping them survive, recover and build a better future. Donate today to help the people of Mosul.

Comments