At Mosul front, Iraqis fleeing and returning cross paths
MOSUL, Iraq — The two teenage sisters hid at home for most of the 2 1/2 years of rule by the Islamic State group. This week, as fighting engulfed their neighbourhood in the northern city of Mosul, Rusul and Doha Ghanem and their family made a run for it.
It took them three days, and they slept in empty houses. Finally, they reached the safety of government-held territory. “We just cannot believe we got out alive,” said the 18-year-old Rusul, though her relief was temporarily dampened as troops lined her father and brother up with other men for security checks.
Rusul and her family were among hundreds of dazed men, women and children who fled fighting in their neighbourhood of Karama this week after it became a front line in the battle against the Islamic State group, hauling their belongings down a main street in bags and suitcases and on push carts.
On the same street, moving in the opposite direction, were residents who had returned to their homes in the neighbouring Quds district, retaken by government forces only a few days ago. At a nearby market, they treated themselves to fresh vegetables, fruit, bread and milk for the first time in weeks.
