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400,000 Children Still Displaced From Mosul Fighting: Save the Children

ISIS's self-declared caliphate effectively collapsed in July, when US-backed Iraqi forces re-took Mosul, the group’s de facto capital in Iraq, after a gruelling nine-month battle.
Ahmed Rasheed
Oct 16 2017
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ISIS's self-declared caliphate effectively collapsed in July, when US-backed Iraqi forces re-took Mosul, the group’s de facto capital in Iraq, after a gruelling nine-month battle.
Displaced Iraqis wait to get ice in Jada camp south of Mosul, Iraq August 9, 2017. Credit: Reuters
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Displaced Iraqis wait to get ice in Jada camp south of Mosul, Iraq August 9, 2017. Credit: Reuters

Baghdad: Around 400,000 children are still displaced from the fighting for Mosul, one year after the start of a military offensive to recapture the Iraqi city from the ISIS, Save the Children said on Monday.

ISIS's self-declared caliphate effectively collapsed in July, when US-backed Iraqi forces re-took Mosul, the group’s de facto capital in Iraq, after a gruelling nine-month battle.

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"Just because the fighting in Mosul has stopped doesn't mean the humanitarian needs aren't great. If anything, children need our help now more than ever – those that are still displaced and those that are returning to see what's left of their homes," said the London-based charity's Iraq country director, Ana Locsin.

"Large parts of Mosul have been reduced to rubble; schools, homes, hospitals, roads, playgrounds and parks. I’ve spoken to dozens of children haunted by their experiences, left with psychological scars that'll take years to heal," Locsin said in a statement.

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With the fall of Mosul and other small towns in the country’s north and west, the only area still under control of ISIS in Iraq is a stretch alongside the western border with Syria, where the militant group is also in retreat.

(Reuters)

This article went live on October sixteenth, two thousand seventeen, at three minutes past two in the afternoon.

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