Flooding forces Iraqis to flee war in rickety boats

Flooding forces Iraqis to flee war in rickety boats
Displaced Iraqis from the al-Haramat neighbourhood, north of Mosul, on Friday, react as Iraqi forces advance towards the area during the ongoing offensive to retake Mosul from Daesh group fighters. (AFP)
Updated 07 May 2017
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Flooding forces Iraqis to flee war in rickety boats

Flooding forces Iraqis to flee war in rickety boats

MOSUL: The Iraqi man laid the body of his wife, wrapped in a black shroud, gently on the bow of a small wooden boat and held onto it as a second man rowed slowly to pick up the man’s three children standing a few meters away.
The two teenage girls and young boy climbed in, careful not to disturb the balance, for the crossing taking their mother, killed in an airstrike this week, to the east bank of the Tigris River. This crossing is no ancient rite, however.
It is an extra hardship heaped on the family by the flooding of the Tigris and the disassembly of the last pontoon bridge linking the two sides of Mosul, where US-backed Iraqi forces have been fighting to oust the Daesh militants who seized the city in 2014.
Loading up everything from clothes and food to injured or dead relatives, hundreds of families exhausted by war have been crossing the river on small, rickety fishing boats capable of holding only five or six people.
Many have been leaving the Musherfa district of western Mosul after US-backed Iraqi forces took it from Daesh on Friday, hoping to reach the relative safety of the eastern banks of the river.
“We suffered Daesh’s injustice, and now that we are free we were promised five bridges,” said Mushref Mohammed, 45, an ice factory worker from Musherfa. “Where are the bridges? We have been waiting for two days.”
“So many of my neighbors and friends died. We were freed, but we are not happy because we lost the people closest to us.”
The flooding has cut off all crossing points between east and west and forced the military to dismantle the makeshift bridges linking the two sides of Iraq’s second-largest city.