
© Hussein Malla AP PhotoAn injured Iraqi man carries his dead niece, who was killed by an ISIS mortar shell at al-Tahrir neighborhood, as they arrive to a field hospital set up by the Iraqi special forces medical unit, at al-Samah neighborhood, in Mosul city, Iraq, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2016.
In modern-day conflicts, civilians have become the "foremost victims," said the president of the Red Cross, commenting on the situation in the Middle East. While in Iraq's Mosul a number of sides are involved in a 'hybrid war,' organizations like his cannot provide much-needed aid.
"The more actors we find in the battlefield, the more armed groups we are confronted with - the more difficult it is to negotiate the humanitarian space," President of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Peter Maurer told RT.
The operation to retake Mosul, the Iraqi stronghold of Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL), was launched over a month ago. An offensive alliance of 100,000 comprises Iraqi Army troops, Kurdish Peshmerga militias, Iraq-backed Shiite militias, Turkish expeditionary forces and western special operations troops providing targeting for US-led coalition airstrikes and advice to local forces.
The parties involved in the operation are diverse and not necessarily friendly to one another.
Maurer said that if the actors are "unstructured," it is
more complicated to deliver aid to suffering people in the region. "It's hindering the security for our staff, it's making our lives more complicated, but it's the reality with which we are confronted today."
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