On the Road to Mosul – Tinged
with Sectarian Suspicion
Tom
Westcott
Freelance
Journalist
IRIN
News
Dust-covered children collected useful-looking pieces of rubbish
or food discarded by soldiers. They tossed them into grubby sacks as they
walked along the roadside, towards the frontline of Iraq’s offensive against
so-called Islamic State. Others held up a two-fingered victory salute or wave,
hoping for donations of food or even cigarettes, while their fathers herded
sheep nearby.
But few of the military vehicles from the Popular
Mobilisation Forces – a loose coalition of predominantly Shia
fighters – even slowed down as they raced on towards the battle, towards Tal
Afar, a strategic town on the road to Mosul.
One PMF soldier told IRIN the children couldn’t be trusted. He
said they’d been trained by IS as young militants or used as informants.
“They’re not naive, these children,” he said. “They know exactly what they’re
doing now, [just] as they knew exactly what they were doing with IS then.” The
Shia fighter fiercely denied his suspicions were linked to the children’s
faith – the majority of Mosul’s citizens are Sunni.
1st photo: Liberation Forces
PMF flags, many showing venerated figures in Shia history, fly
everywhere across the newly liberated desert terrain: from the vehicles and
buildings to the sandbanks themselves. Ostensibly, they’re triumphant markers
of the key territorial gains made against IS, but the flags also hint at
something less visible: the simmering sectarian tensions that underpin this
conflict. Feelings of mutual suspicion run high.
Mosul momentum
A few kilometres from the frontline, a sad convoy of decrepit
farm vehicles and ancient cars – many on tow due to lack of fuel – gathered in
a sandy valley. The 100 or so families inside had fled that morning as clashes
reached their village of Tel Serwal.
“The most important thing for us before we enter any area is to
ensure that all families have escaped to a safe place,” said Commander Abu
Thurrat, who leads a unit in the PMF’s powerful Badr Organisation, the group
leading the fight around Tal Afar. “Our focus is always to liberate humans
first.”
The PMF (al-Hashd al-Shaabi in Arabic) have played a vital role
in Iraq’s two-year fight against IS. This past weekend, parliament voted to
make them an official government force. This may bring them under a greater
degree of central control, although exactly how this will work isn’t yet
clear.
The forces and the new law are both controversial. Many Sunni
lawmakers boycotted the vote; some concerned about Iranian influence, others
about alleged abuses against civilians. For now, the PMF have agreed not to
enter Mosul proper, but they’re very much active on the outskirts.
On the ground near Tel Serwal, families in the convoy were full
of gratitude for the PMF’s role in their liberation. "Ever since IS took
over... we considered ourselves like dead people. And today, after
being freed by [the PMF], we are finally alive again," said Yassar Awad
Ismael, 35. "It was terrible under IS. We had no services, no electricity
or telephone networks, no work, and no petrol for our trucks."
2nd photo: Mosul Residents
Ismael described how villagers had struggled to adhere to strict
doctrines and lived in daily fear for their lives after IS militants publicly
executed one local man for no apparent reason. Other punishments were also
meted out in the middle of the street, in full view. "If you were caught
smoking or if your beard was too short, you got 20 lashes,” he said. “And if
your trousers were too long, or if your wife was seen without a full-face veil,
it was 15 lashes.”
As PMF forces made swift advances towards Tal Afar in the past
month, IS has forced Tel Serwal residents to abandon their homes and pitch tents
just outside the village, turning them into human shields – a civilian buffer
zone to slow down the offensive.
"[IS] kicked down our doors, entered our homes and shot
around us with machine guns, forcing us to leave and live in tents outside the
village," explained Chamali Faisal Hussain, 45. "We had to leave most
of our things, and they took everything from us, even our food.”
Fearful families had spent the last fortnight holed up in the
desert encampment until fighting started in earnest around Tel Serwal.
"When the rockets and mortar fire started close to the village, IS were
distracted and we could escape," Ismail said.
Gratitude and suspicion
Like many others in the convoy, Hussain expressed heartfelt
thanks to the PMF for her liberation from IS. Unlike widely circulated images
showing women tearing off their veils in other parts of Iraq, she and other
female family members still wore their niqabs.
Commander Thurrat was quick to highlight useful cooperation
between the PMF forces and some of the villagers, who had provided intelligence
information about IS numbers, positions, and activities.
But after fighters distributed food and cigarettes amongst the
convoy of fleeing villagers, the atmosphere shifted from one of gentle euphoria
to concern and mutual suspicion.
Men and boys were separated from their families as Iraqi police
investigation units arrived to start screening them for suspected
collaboration or affiliation with IS.
Such screenings
are conducted near frontlines at sites across the country, as well as at some
displacement camps. But there is little transparency in the process and there
have been widespread allegations of abuse and score-settling.
Journalists were ordered to leave the area once the
investigation units arrived but IRIN heard the men of Tel Serwal being
instructed to surrender any weapons they carried, with assurances that there
would be no retribution.
3rd photo
While civilians are sometimes suspicious of the PMF, and the
fleeing residents of Tel Serwal admitted that they had no idea where they were
going to be taken, the forces have valid reasons to worry about some of those
who lived under IS. In Iraq, as in IS strongholds elsewhere, there have been
multiple reported cases of former militants shaving their beards, cutting their
hair, and hiding amongst ordinary fleeing civilians to avoid detection.
"No army has really entered this area for years, and it has
long been favoured by al-Qaeda, IS, and other terrorist groups," said
Commander Thurrat, stressing the importance of such investigations.
Uncomfortable homecomings
While an estimated 3.1 million Iraqis have been displaced, a
fair number are now heading
back home, especially in Ramadi, capital of Anbar province. In
the north too, nearer Mosul, a handful of residents are starting to return to
liberated villages. They are finding that the landscape, as well as the flags,
has changed.
Humble farmyards are now overlooked from rooftops by soldiers
armed with guns and others with binoculars trained on the horizon.
In one tiny mud-hut village, three old men stood for hours in
the dusty central track, holding small, dirty containers and lengths of
hosepipe, hoping one of the military vehicles trundling towards the frontline
would let them syphon out a little petrol to fuel their antiquated machines.
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