Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Iraq humanitarian crisis 'one of the world's worst'
Iraq humanitarian crisis 'one of the world's worst'
Mar 30, 2026 4:27 AM

  More than 10 million Iraqis are in need of immediate humanitarian aid, according to UN estimates.

  Iraqi civilians and officials have voiced concern over the humanitarian situation in the country's western cities of Fallujah and Ramadi.

  For almost two years now, Fallujah has endured a siege imposed on the city after it became the first to fall to the ISIS in January 2014.

  Since then, the Iraqi army has placed a near-total blockade, and ISIL has barred any civilians from leaving the city. With only a few routes remaining open, there is a serious shortage of food, medicine and fuel.

  Approximately 50,000 of the residents in Fallujah are at risk of starvation.

  Recently, the United Nations described Iraq's humanitarian crisis as "one of the world's worst", saying that more than 10 million Iraqis, making up almost a third of the population, are in need of immediate humanitarian aid. This number has doubled from last year.

  In a statement to the Security Council, UN Envoy to Iraq, Jan Kubis, warned of the potential mass displacement of an additional two million Iraqis in the coming months. He called on the international community to provide aid to those in Fallujah, whose conditions were described as alarming.

  Last February, Ramadi was fully recaptured by Iraqi forces and the United States-led coalition. The city, however, remains in dire need of assistance. Most of the houses have been destroyed, according to Ramadi residents.

  While locals say the situation is more manageable in Ramadi than in Fallujah, they have expressed concern over power cuts, the absence of medical facilities as well as the unexploded landmines.

  "We have no clean drinking water. In fact, we have no water supplies at all. We returned to our houses as soon as the army took over the city. We could not wait any longer to return to

  Ramadi, because we had enough with being displaced and living in camps," said Fallah Khalifa, a resident of Ramadi.

  Another local, Mohammed Faraj, blames the Iraqi government for the "miserable situation" they are in. Faraj says the Iraqi government is not doing enough "to help people move back and settle down" in Ramadi.

  Recent press reports described the amount of destruction in the city as "shocking", pointing to the more than 3,000 buildings and 400 roads that were destroyed between May and January 2015, when the city was under ISIL's control.

  More than 50 mass graves have been discovered in the territories formerly controlled by ISIL, according to the UN. In Ramadi alone, three graves containing up to 40 sets of remains were uncovered in a football field.

  According to the UN, approximately 2.6 million Iraqis have fled the country since the beginning of the crisis in January 2014.

  Additionally, more than one million Iraqis fled between 2006 and 2008 due to the sectarian war in Iraq, following the US-led invasion and occupation in 2003.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A military vehicle of the Iraqi security forces is driven in the streets of Ramadi, in this January 16, 2016 file photo. (Reuters)

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Trial exposes Turkey's 'deep state'
  Turkey has always been a country haunted by conspiracy theories – and not without reason.   Western powers nearly succeeded in dividing Turkey between themselves at the end of the Ottoman Empire ... and after the rise of the Soviet Union, new Nato member Turkey was on the frontline of the...
UN Report: 346 Afghan children killed in 2009, mostly by NATO
  Largest portion of killings came in air strikes.   When the record 2009 civilian death toll began to emerge, NATO was quick to brag that they had actually killed fewer civilians than the Taliban. This appears to be the case still, though UN reports suggested the difference wasn’t nearly as dramatic...
British military intelligence 'ran renegade torture unit in Iraq'
  Fresh evidence has emerged that British military intelligence ran a secret operation in Iraq which authorized degrading and unlawful treatment of prisoners. Documents reveal that prisoners were kept hooded for long periods in intense heat and deprived of sleep by defense intelligence officers. They also reveal that officers running the...
Children of Gaza: Scarred and Trapped
  Omsyatte adjusts her green school uniform and climbs gingerly on to a desk at the front of the classroom. The shy 12-year-old holds up a brightly colored picture and begins to explain to her classmates what she has drawn. It is a scene played out in schools all over the...
The 'Obama doctrine': kill, don't detain
  George Bush left a big problem in the shape of Guantánamo. The solution? Don't capture 'bad guys', assassinate by drone.   In 2001, Charles Krauthammer first coined the phrase "Bush Doctrine", which would later become associated most significantly with the legal anomaly known as pre-emptive strike. Understanding the doctrine with hindsight...
Israel's Al-Naqab 'frontier'
  Tens of thousands of Palestinian citizens of Israel marched yesterday in Sakhnin, an Israeli city in the Lower Galilee, to protest against past and present systematic discrimination. But with the focus on Israel's policies of land confiscation, there was significance in a second protest that day.   In the Negev (referred...
Iraq outrage over US video killings
  Angry families of civilians killed in a US helicopter attack in Baghdad three years ago, documented in a video leaked on the internet, are seeking justice for their deaths.   Earlier this week Wikileaks, a whistleblower website that publishes anonymously sourced documents, broadcast a video showing the US military firing at...
Iraq: Seven years of occupation
  By Raed Jarrar   On April 9, 2003, exactly seven years ago, Baghdad fell under the US-led occupation. Baghdad did not fall in 21 days, though; it fell after 13 years of wars, bombings and economic sanctions. Millions of Iraqis, including myself, watched our country die slowly before our eyes in...
Two-thirds of boys in Afghan jails are brutalized
  Nearly two of every three male juveniles arrested in Afghanistan are physically abused, according to a study based on interviews with 40 percent of all those now incarcerated in the country’s juvenile justice system.   The study, carried out by U.S. defense attorney Kimberly Motley for the international children’s rights organization...
Majority of Turkish people "want new civilian constitution"
  Two-thirds of Turks would vote in a referendum to reform Turkey's judiciary, which country's hardline secularist bloc want to block, a poll showed on Saturday.   Such backing would suffice to pass planned constitutional changes that could raise tensions between judiciary and military, on the one hand, and the AK Party...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved