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Islamic militancy
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Iraqis suffer in desert camps after fleeing Fallujah

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An Iraqi boy from Fallujah squats nearby tents at a newly opened camp in the desert. Photo: AFP
Associated Press

Tens of thousands of Iraqis who survived a harrowing flight from Fallujah now find themselves in sprawling desert camps with little food, water or shelter. The growing humanitarian crisis less than an hour’s drive from Baghdad has reinforced the region’s deep-seated distrust of the government, and could undermine recent gains against the Islamic State group.

As Iraqi forces battled their way into the city and Islamic State militants melted away, Khaled Suliman Ahmed fled in a wheelchair, joining hundreds of others fleeing on foot into the desert. When the wheelchair broke down after 10km, his sons and wife took turns carrying him over their shoulders, and when they saw the tents in the distance, they assumed their nightmare was over.

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“I thought we were going to be saved from hell and brought to heaven,” Ahmed said, “but we were surprised by what we found here.”

Hundreds of displaced Iraqis are taking shelter in the Amriyat al-Fallujah camp. Photo: AFP
Hundreds of displaced Iraqis are taking shelter in the Amriyat al-Fallujah camp. Photo: AFP
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What they found was a sprawling camp in the desert with little food or water, and nowhere near enough tents to shelter the tens of thousands of civilians who had descended on it. They joined thousands of people living out in the open, where midday temperatures approach 50 degrees Celsius.

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