The Star Malaysia

Left to rot

Decaying corpses of IS militants spark health concerns in Mosul.

-

MOSUL ( Iraq): For three years, militants made life in Iraq’s Mosul impossible. Now, six months after their defeat, even their corpses are polluting everyone’s existence as no one wants to move them.

The rare few who dare to venture into Mosul’s historic centre do so with their nose and mouth firmly covered with masks or scarves to keep out the stench.

Amid the rubble-strewn alleys overlookin­g the River Tigris, unburied human remains are rotting.

They are the bodies of Islamic State group members, residents and the civil defence say, pointing to their Afghan robes, long beards, and sometimes even suicide belts.

Here and there, on a wall or on a road sign, are scribbled the words “Cemetery for the people of Daesh”, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

The militants seized second city Mosul in July 2014, imposing their rigid interpreta­tion of Islam on inhabitant­s and dispensing brutal punishment­s for those who did not obey.

Iraqi forces declared victory against IS in the city in July 2017, after months of fighting that killed hundreds of civilians and caused tens of thousands to flee.

But six months on, the putrefying bodies of militants killed in the battle are preventing some residents from returning home.

Othman Ahmad, an unemployed 35-year-old, said he would not go back to living in the Old City with his wife and two children as long as the corpses remained.

“We’re scared with all these bodies and this awful smell,” he said, in an alley not far from his former home, now barely recognisab­le after the destructio­n.

Not far off, Abu Shaker, 60, said he was terrified the bodies might lead to “germs and epidemics”.

But civil defence teams say it is not their job to remove the corpses of the militants.

Their mission, which ended on Jan 10, was to extract the bodies of civilians from the rubble so their families could bury them.

For months on end, during and after the battle, they retrieved the remains of men, women and children and carried them away in

black body bags.

There is no official death toll for civilians killed in the battle for Mosul, but the United Nations and a monitoring group have said hundreds were killed.

Extracting the bodies was gruelling work, as rescue teams could not enter the Old City’s narrow alleyways with their vehicles or heavy equipment.

“To dig, we’d use light tools and our bare hands, so getting bodies out took a lot of effort and time,” civil defence officer Lieutenant-Colonel Rabie Ibrahim said. Whenever they were alerted, his colleagues said, civil defence members dashed out to search the ruins, tackling the mounds of broken concrete that now covers the Old City.

To avoid having to bury unidentifi­ed bodies, they only searched in the company of relatives able to identify those they had lost.

As for the bodies of Iraqi and foreign miltants, it is the city council’s responsibi­lity.

“We have already brought 450 out of the rubble, but there are hundreds more,” city council head of services Abdel Sattar al-Habbu said.

Those bodies have been thrown into mass graves, without any rites.

Removing them is slow, he said, because the militants stole and destroyed most of their equipment.

And some bodies still carry undetonate­d explosives that the security forces did not defuse.

But time is pressing, said Hossam Eddine al-Abar, of the Mosul region’s provincial council.

“The bodies have to be moved before it rains and the Tigris rises, taking with it the bodies rotting on its banks,” he said.

To dig, we’d use light tools and our bare hands, so getting bodies out took a lot of effort and time. Lieutenant-Colonel Rabie Ibrahim

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia