Terror on Mosul’s front line: the story behind the photo

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MOSUL // Both screaming in terror, a father and the young daughter he cradled in his arm fled through the rubble-strewn streets of Wadi Hajar, transformed in a flash into a battleground between ISIL fighters and Iraqi special forces.

They and their neighbours - some wearing rubber sandals, some barefoot - were running from an ISIL counter-attack in this part of Mosul, dodging gunfire as the militants closed in.

When they reached the special forces lines, males were ordered to lift their shirts to prove they were not suicide bombers.

Some had to take off their clothes or show their belts, though not those carrying children.

In this case, the father was so beside himself, so panicked. It was obvious he was not from ISIL because he had a short shirt on and was carrying a child. It is believed they will both be taken to a refugee camp.

It has become a common tactic for the militants to use suicide bombers, and the soldiers were firing their guns in the air to try to slow the residents down, shouting at them in Arabic.

A day earlier, Iraqi troops used bulldozers to move cars into a makeshift barricade aimed at protecting residents from suicide attacks in the area.

Civilians have been displaced in greater numbers in recent days, as the fighting in and around ISIL’s last strongholds in Mosul rages in residential neighbourhoods where water, food and power have been rationed for months.

* Goran Tomasevic, Reuters photographer