Khaleej Times

Heartbroke­n residents get a glimpse of Raqqa in ruins

- AFP

raqqa — Tears streaming down her freckled face, 35-year-old Asya took in the shattered glass, gutted storefront­s and crumbling cafes — all that remain of her favourite shopping street in Syria’s Raqqa.

“This was once the most beautiful city, my God,” said the woman in a mustard-coloured headscarf, gesturing out of the back seat of a car moving slowly down Raqqa’s oncebustli­ng Tal Abyad boulevard.

“Now look around you. Look at our homes,” she wailed.

Asya was one of the only civilians to access central Raqqa since the city was seized from the Daesh group this week by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces.

A handful of civilians — relatives of SDF fighters and displaced local officials — had been granted a oneday pass to access Raqqa for the ceremony and seized the chance to see what was left of their homes.

Asya’s husband, an SDF fighter, took his wife and four children in their rented car after the ceremony and drove to find their home in Raqqa’s Al Rumeilah district.

this was once the most beautiful city, my God. now look around you. Look at our homes.”

Asya, a Raqqa civilian

“I saw my house but wish I hadn’t. It’s been bombed — I only knew it from our personal items scattered outside,” Asya said. “I would have rather had my things stolen but the walls still standing.”

Asya and her family had considered moving back to their native Raqqa from the town of Tabqa, 70km west and also recaptured from Daesh earlier this year.

“But now I don’t even want to come back to Raqqa, because all our beautiful memories have been turned into tragedies,” Asya said, adding she had fond recollecti­ons of the now-ravaged street around her.

Some storefront­s are still identifiab­le: a tattered sign outside a children’s clinic, bare glass displays at a jewellery shop, and a tailor’s fabric and sewing machines.

I wasn’t expecting the destructio­n to be this bad. It’s unreal — there are no homes left, no signs of life.”

Khalil, a lawyer and RCC member

“Yes, we’re happy to be back, but there’s destructio­n, pain, and sadness,” said lawyer and RCC member Fadila Hamad Al Khalil, who fled Daesh-ruled Raqqa in April, before the SDF broke into the city.

“I wasn’t expecting the destructio­n to be this bad. It’s unreal — there are no buildings left, no infrastruc­ture, no signs of life whatsoever.”

Khalil, too, was only able to catch a brief glimpse of her home from the outside before the SDF’s ceremony to hand over governance of Raqqa to the RCC. She said she barely recognised her native city: “Everything is mashed together from the destructio­n.”

Even those with a one-day pass could only see their homes from the outside, afraid of the explosives that could lie in wait inside.

We would see pictures, but we didn’t know and couldn’t expect that we would see raqqa like this.”

Mohammed, an engineer

Mahmud Mohammed, an engineer and member of the RCC’s reconstruc­tion committee, said the glimpse into Raqqa provided a rude wake-up call for rebuilding efforts.

But after seeing the devastatio­n on Friday, they admitted they had been too optimistic.

“When we came into the city, the (reconstruc­tion) plan changed completely,” said Mohammed, 27, as he half-heartedly took pictures of the damaged Tal Abyad street on his cell phone.

“We would see pictures, but we didn’t know and couldn’t expect that we would see Raqqa like this.”

Mohammed pointed out a row of damaged storefront­s and said his family had once owned them all, operating a relief centre and a lingerie shop even under Daesh. —

 ?? AP ?? Damaged buildings in Raqqa two days after Syrian Democratic Forces said that their fighters have taken full control of the city. —
AP Damaged buildings in Raqqa two days after Syrian Democratic Forces said that their fighters have taken full control of the city. —

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