AL-QAIM,
Iraq, May 13, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Hundreds
of Iraqi families have fled the western Iraqi town of Al-Qaim to
escape the ongoing US attacks there, with the Red Crescent warning
that the US offensive has turned the city into a “big disaster”,
as local inhabitants complained about the stench of dead bodies laid
on the streets or beneath the rubble of houses as a result of the
fierce US offensive.
Firdous
Al-Abadi, a spokesman for the Iraqi Red Crescent Society (IRCS), said
more than 100 Iraqi families have fled Al-Qaim in the Al-Anbar
province near the Syrian borders to the town of A’ana, some 75 km
from Al-Qaim.
She
added that unknown numbers of Iraqi families also fled to Rawa and
Haditha, some 70 km to the northeast.
“More
people are desperately trying to leave the town and according to our
information US troops have closed all exit points,” Abadi told the
Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN) Thursday, May 12.
The
ongoing clashes in the city barred many medical convoys from reaching
the city to bury corpses of the Iraqis killed in the fighting, whose
bodies are laid on the streets and beneath the rubble of the houses.
“The
situation is very tragic and could turn into a disaster because of the
dead bodies which are left in the streets,” doctor Walid Al-Obeidi
told Al-Quds Press Friday.
He
urged both US occupation forces and Iraqi resistance fighters to halt
the clashes to allow the medical convoys to bury the dead.
More
than 1,000 US Marines have been launching a sweeping offensive on the
city of Al-Qaim since May 7, on claims of searching for followers of
Al-Qaeda-linked Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi, the most wanted man in Iraq.
No
Choice
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Iraqi children pay the price.
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Iraqi
families, who have fled the town, said many innocent people were
caught in the middle of the clashes between the US occupation forces
and the Iraqi resistance and had no choice but to leave their homes.
“I
couldn’t take anything with me as we ran to escape clashes. We have
been helped by a Sheikh in this mosque,” Abu Omar told IRIN, as he
and his four-member family took refuge in a mosque in Al-Qaim.
Um
Mazin, another Iraqi woman fleeing the town, said she left the area
with her family to escape the American bombings, according to the
Associated Press (AP).
“The
Americans do not hit the gunmen; they hit the houses of civilians.”
But
as they hurried to escape their lives, they failed to bring enough
supplies they needed to survive.
“We
did not take enough food, water, medicine or clothes...and we are
tired of the sandstorms,” Um Mazin said wearily.
“No
one can go back now, and we do not know what happened to our
husbands.”
On
Thursday, the Iraqi Red Crescent Society sent a convoy of supplies
to the area, carrying food and medical items, potable water, tents and
ambulances.
“A
team of 15 people with three trucks packed with tents, blankets,
kitchen utensils, water, medicine and food arrived today in
Akashat,” Mazen Abdallah told Agence France Presse (AFP) Friday.
Lack
of Supplies
As
they left the western Iraqi town, fleeing families have taken refuge
in two abandoned schools and a mosque between Al-Qaim and Rawa as well
as in the local sports stadium to escape the clashes.
Helping
them to survive, local religious leaders from the area were supplying
the families with food and water.
However,
there are high fears of a humanitarian crisis in the area as a result
of the continuing clashes which prevented the relief convoys from
reaching afflicted people.
“Our
contacts inside Al-Qaim, told us by phone, that there is no power, no
telephones and a 24-hour curfew has been imposed,” Al-Abadi said.
“Iraq
cannot accept another humanitarian disaster like Fallujah again.
Innocent people are in the middle of the battle. It’s an injustice
against the Iraqi people, especially the children,” she added.
10,000
US marines and army forces, alongside some 2,000 Iraqi national guard
soldiers unleashed
a long anticipated expected onslaught on the city on Monday,
November 8.
The
onslaught has paralyzed the city of 300,000-people. There has been no
water or electricity for days and food shops have been closed.
Many
buildings in Fallujah have been completely destroyed, with TV footage
showing some districts all but leveled during the offensive.
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