At least 20,000 children trapped in Iraq's Fallujah: UN

Residents who have managed to flee the Fallujah area speak of severe shortages of food and drinking water


Afp June 01, 2016
A displaced Iraqi child, who fled from Islamic State violence in Anbar, looks out from inside an tent at a refugee camp near Amiriyat al-Fallujah. PHOTO: REUTERS

BAGHDAD: At least 20,000 children are trapped in militant bastion Fallujah under siege by Iraqi forces and face shortages and forced recruitment as fighters, the UN Children's Fund said on Wednesday.

"UNICEF estimates that at least 20,000 children remain trapped in the city," the agency's Iraq representative Peter Hawkins said.

Thousands flee Islamic State offensive in northern Syria

The few residents who have managed to flee the Fallujah area since Iraqi forces launched an offensive against the Islamic State group on May 22-23 speak of severe shortages of food and drinking water.

The few hundred families who have escaped IS territory were camped out on the outskirts and residents reached by phone inside the city spoke of even worse conditions.

"Children face the risk of forced recruitment into the fighting, strict procedures for security screening and separation from their families," Hawkins said.

Iraq elite forces take position around Fallujah

"Children who are recruited see their lives and futures jeopardised as they are forced to carry and use arms, fighting in an adult war."

UNICEF renewed calls for safe corridors to be opened to allow Fallujah's civilian population to escape.

The United Nations has accused IS of using the civilian population as human shields as it prepares to mount a desperate defence of one of its most emblematic bastions.

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