Mosul battle: Some 5,000 civilians fled ahead of fighting

 Al-Hol in Syria has already received thousands of people fleeing Mosul

Al-Hol in Syria has already received thousands of people fleeing Mosul

Thousands of people have fled the Mosul area and more are expected as Iraqi troops move on the city to liberate it from the so-called Islamic State (IS).

Some 5,000 people have crossed the border into Syria in the last 10 days, the aid agency Save the Children says.

They have arrived at the al-Hol refugee camp where conditions are already reported to be filthy and overcrowded.

Up to 1.5 million civilians are thought to still be in Mosul, with up to 5,000 IS fighters.

The UN is preparing for what it fears could be the biggest man-made humanitarian crisis in recent times.

Refugee camps are being built in the south, east and north of Mosul in preparation for a flood of people fleeing the city. The UN says it expects at least 200,000 in the coming days and weeks.

 IS militants are reported to have set fire to oil wells around Mosul

IS militants are reported to have set fire to oil wells around Mosul

Mosul residents had been told by the Iraqi government that it might be safer to stay in the city while the operation is under way – with fears IS fighters have booby-trapped roads and placed snipers on routes in and out.

But there are also fears that IS militants could use residents as human shields by moving into their neighbourhoods, and concern that the group may even use chemical weapons.

Residents, reached by telephone by Reuters news agency, confirmed that IS was trying to prevent people from fleeing the city and had directed some of them towards buildings likely to be targeted by air strikes.

US President Barack Obama said on Tuesday it was important to ensure that Mosul’s residents could safely flee the city.

“If we aren’t successful in helping ordinary people as they’re fleeing Isil [IS], then that makes us vulnerable to seeing Isil return,” he told reporters in Washington.

Many of those in and around Mosul who have already escaped have headed west to camps across the border in Syria, including al-Hol camp.

Al-Hol was built to house 7,500 people but currently holds 9,000 refugees.

The charity Save the Children says 5,000 people have arrived in the last 10 days, with 1,000 more waiting at the border.

The UN has disputed these numbers and says that some of the new arrivals may be Syrian.

It says says the camp received 912 people in the last 24 hours and is expecting a further 3,000 people who were dropped off by smugglers and are being cleared by security.

The camp is being expanded to eventually take in 50,000 people, but Save the Children says the camp currently has just 16 latrines, is littered with waste and faeces, and has no clean water.

BBC

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