Six months into battle for Mosul, water and trauma care are key UN and partner priorities

Six months into battle for Mosul, water and trauma care are key UN and partner priorities.
26 April 2017 – Safe drinking water is a major concern in Mosul, where a battle has been underway for the past six months to retake the city from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the United Nations humanitarian arm has said.
Some 450,000 people are currently displaced and the number continues “to increase rapidly,” the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Iraq said.
Humanitarian partners are trucking water to eastern Mosul at a rate of 2.3 million litres every day.
Nearly 28 neighbourhoods now have access to clean drinking water in the east.
However, “in newly retaken areas of western Mosul city, water trucking has already begun on a small scale, but significant increase in scale is required,” OCHA said.
The UN is also working with partners to re-establish a functioning city-wide water network.
Since mid-October, more than 8,100 people have been referred to hospitals in Mosul and surrounding areas.
In addition, the UN and its partners are working to house families and provide protection, particularly to women and children.
The 2017 Humanitarian Response Plan for Iraq requesting $985 million is currently 17 per cent funded, according to OCHA.

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