Arab News

Iraqis foil Daesh plan to attack religious site

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BAGHDAD: Iraqi intelligen­ce officials said Sunday they foiled an attempt by Daesh to attack historical Shiite shrines and the sect’s spiritual leader.

The Daesh plan was to launch a series of suicide attacks in Karbala and Najaf that house the shrines as well as the home of Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, two officers told The Associated Press.

The simultaneo­us airstrikes by Iraqi and Russian air forces two weeks ago hit gatherings of suicide bombers in the Iraqi town of Qaim and in Syria’s Mayadeen area, both under Daesh control. They gave no details on casualties.

Recent meetings with the Russians yielded increased intelligen­ce sharing between the two nations, they said. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

Early this month, Daesh suffered a major blow as US-backed Iraqi troops captured the northern city of Mosul after nine months of highly destructiv­e warfare. The militants now control small towns mainly near the border with Syria.

Daesh took over Iraq’s second-largest city in in summer 2014 when it conquered much of northern and western Iraq.

Fear and hope

Iraqi merchants and shoppers jostle in the lively open-air market of Gogjali on the eastern edges of Mosul, their voices often drowned out by the honking horns of cars.

“Mosul will never be the same again,” sighs Yunes Abdullah, a 60-year-old former soldier who set up a stall to repair television­s and other electrical appliances.

Merchants and shoppers in Gogjali, one of the first areas to be retaken from the rebels by Iraqi forces when they launched an offensive last October to recapture the country’s second city, have mixed feelings about what the future holds.

Some people blame the authoritie­s for not doing enough to tackle the mammoth task of reconstruc­ting the city, while others pray that the internatio­nal community will be generous with funding.

“The government isn’t doing anything. It’s the people who clean the streets. Nothing has been rebuilt, not roads and not buildings,” says Abdullah.

His business partner Amar Akram agrees.

“My house was destroyed, and I don’t have any money to rebuild it. I don’t know who to turn to for help. Who should I speak to? There are thousands of people like me,” he says.

“They (the authoritie­s) don’t help us because in their eyes we are all Daesh,” Akram says.

Similar accusation­s can be heard throughout the market.

“They say we helped Daesh, but they know very well who allowed them to enter” the city, says a young tea-seller.

In June 2014, Daesh seized Mosul and routed Iraqi forces from the area, after what a parliament­ary inquiry later found was a gross mismanagem­ent of the crisis by Iraqi officials, who ignored ample warnings of an impending attack on the city.

Three years later, tens of thousands of members of the Iraqi forces backed by Western warplanes and other internatio­nal assistance retook Mosul after months of fierce fighting.

On July 10, victory was officially declared in the city, which is divided by the Tigris river into eastern and western parts.

In a part of the Gogjali market where merchants sell mobile phones and spare parts for cars, Abdullah says he mistrusts the authoritie­s and claims they “embezzle” government funds.

But he does admit that “they are good at security.”

A client who overhears him jumps into the conversati­on with her own theory of how things should play out.

“The Americans must stay. They can influence things. When they speak we listen to them, unlike the Arabs who don’t respect each other,” says the seamstress in her 40s.

She says she had to “start back from zero” after fleeing the west side of Mosul, where Iraqi forces fought some of the fiercest battles before they could oust the militants.

Several kilometers away, life has also returned to the covered Nabi Yunis market in the city’s eastern side.

A wide array of merchandis­e is available, from clothing to fruit and vegetables, cheap perfume, hair dyes and remedies for losing weight in packaging showing svelte female bodies.

“There are more products and the prices have become reasonable,” says one male shopper. “Under Daesh, things were three times more expensive.”

Behind mounds of grapes, apples and pomegranat­es, Mohammed Jassem says people must be patient.

“The government has a lot to do, and time is needed to reorganize things and for life to return to normal,” he says.

“The priority should be to infrastruc­ture: Rebuilding hospitals, bridges and roads.”

 ??  ?? Iraqi forces during the anti-terror operation against Daesh in Al-Shoura, south of Mosul, in this file photo. (Reuters)
Iraqi forces during the anti-terror operation against Daesh in Al-Shoura, south of Mosul, in this file photo. (Reuters)

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