Red Crescent spokeswoman Ferdus al-Ibadi said that the trucks with food and medical supplies will travel instead to villages around Al-Fallujah where tens of thousands of civilians from the city are camping to escape the weeklong U.S. assault that began on 8 November.
The U.S.-led forces in Al-Fallujah allowed the convoy to enter the general hospital grounds on the western edge of the city on 13 November, but -- citing safety reasons -- refused it permission to go further.
No aid has reached civilians in Al-Fallujah since the fighting began. Aid agencies describe the situation as a humanitarian disaster, but U.S. military officials and Iraqi government officials disagree.
(AFP/Reuters/AP)
[For the latest news on Iraq, see RFE/RL's webpage on "The New Iraq".]
The U.S.-led forces in Al-Fallujah allowed the convoy to enter the general hospital grounds on the western edge of the city on 13 November, but -- citing safety reasons -- refused it permission to go further.
No aid has reached civilians in Al-Fallujah since the fighting began. Aid agencies describe the situation as a humanitarian disaster, but U.S. military officials and Iraqi government officials disagree.
(AFP/Reuters/AP)
[For the latest news on Iraq, see RFE/RL's webpage on "The New Iraq".]