an 18-month-old girl was killed. her name was amyra ali. her father omar is overwhelmed with grief. he cry, what did she do wrong? she was just playing. she is gone from me and she s my only one. every day this make-shift clinic inside mosul sees the terrible consequences of mortars fired into civilian areas. it s a bloody production line. the wounded are delivered, patched up quickly, loaded into ambushing and thrown into hospitals. at times it seems endless as one ambulance pulls in, carrying more wounded civilians. they ve unloaded with great care as the medics worked to help the victims of yet another isis mortar attack. but they can t save everyone.
as an ambulance pulls in, dozens of medical workers rush up to it. but it s a carnage that s just beginning. everybody here, the emergency service workers i spoke to have been down into the world trade center site say this is just the tip of the iceberg. there s going to be massive amounts of casualties. what are they telling you about people? were there many people inside the building, or is that just is it just too early to tell? it s too early to tell. there were certainly, you know, probably hundreds, even thousands of people in the buding even though it was before 9:00 on the start of the usual work period because it s just such a large area. so the number of casualties is just enormous. they re just beginning tout sor it out and getting to the first few they can get to. but the ambulances are coming in. they re lined up, every ambulance in new york has been summoned. they re standing in a queue. they go in as soon as they can get a victim and bring them up here right away.