Safety issues in a warzone
Published on 31. July 2017
from CADUS-PR

von-sicherheit-und-anderen-notwendigkeiten-im-kriegsgebiet-201-feature-Auswahl220281420von201729-6bf882c2
Right next to our camp is the “Casualties Collection Point” (CCP) of the 9th division of the Iraqi military. A CCP is the military version of our “Trauma Stabilisation Points (TSP). Throughout Mossul, all non-governmental TSPs are entirely embedded in the military posts, where NGO staff and military units eat, sleep and work together side by side.
Peculiar insofar as the fact that humanitarian organizations are usually bound to a pledge of political neutrality/ policy of non-alignment. However, as the “Islamic State” couldn’t care less about the Geneva Convention and considers hospitals a legitimate target, the close cooperation of military and NGOs was born out of a necessity for safety.
Furthermore, with the current situation, the only way for organizations like ours to reach injured civilians, or for them to reach us, is through the military. The “Islamic State” shoots civilians attempting to flee and likewise fires at members of aid groups who are attempting to help the injured.


The only way to get medical attention is to get picked up by the military, who are themselves retrieving their injured troops. Otherwise, wounded civilians are left to succumb to their injuries or the desert sun in the wastelands between the Iraqi military and the “Islamic State”.
These circumstances have led us to work much closer with the military than intended. The collaboration between NGOs and the Iraqi army is on one hand an important safety measure and on the other hand an emergency logistical necessity. Reality is shifted in warzones. Nevertheless, helping civilian communities remains our highest priority.
Published
Author: by Jonas Grünwald
Faces of CADUS – Monitoring & Evaluation in Iraq
There are people where you can tell right away that they are truly passionate about what they do. This is the case with Muhammed, our newest employee in Iraq. Talking to him, it quickly becomes apparent that humanitarian work is his passion.
COVID-19 response: Masks for refugees
Target country/region: European outer borders Period: May/June 2021 For a large donation of 1.5 million surgical masks, we organized the distribution to 20 humanitarian organizations across Europe active in the care of refugees.
Year after year – The water crisis in northeastern Syria.
While parts of Germany have been hit by massive rain floods in recent weeks and are now facing the consequences of this destructive force, an opposite catastrophe has been unfolding in northeastern Syria in recent months - water is more than scarce and countless people have been cut off from their electricity and …




