The National - News

Recovery for war-torn Raqqa seems remote

▶ The fractured country remains a decimated warzone, even after ISIS was driven out

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Before it was ravaged by war, Raqqa, the capital of the Syrian province bearing the same name, was a vibrant city of 400,000 people. It changed hands three times in the course of a war that has now claimed half a million lives and reduced 10 times as many Syrians to the status of refugees, driven out of their homeland. The site of one of the earliest rebel victories against Bashar Al Assad’s regime, Raqqa rapidly yielded to the advancing troops of ISIS, who anointed the city the capital of its so-called caliphate, before a four-month long siege in October 2017 by US-backed Kurdish forces drove them out.

The last of these battles was apocalypti­c: almost every building in the city was reduced to rubble. Today, as The National reported, Raqqa epitomises the immense challenges of post-ISIS Syria, a fractured land that is still a warzone. ISIS has been defeated but the fear of its re-emergence continues to haunt the people who have trickled back into Raqqa. Even if ISIS were stamped out, the city’s mostly Arab population has other existentia­l threats to worry about: the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, their de facto rulers, are embroiled in conflict with Turkey on Syria’s northern border while Mr Al Assad is coiled in the wings, waiting for an opportunit­y to reassert his regime’s authority there. As the recent battle for Yarmouk – decimated by the regime’s barrel bombs – demonstrat­ed yet again, ordinary Syrians are viewed as expendable by Mr Al Assad.

His sole obsession is territory and in his push for absolute control, he is as unsparing as ISIS. Few will regard the flag planted by his government in Yarmouk as a symbol of their liberation. To most, it heralds the continuati­on in a different guise of the savagery which they endured over the past years under the rule of militants. Given the absence of a global will to effect political change in Syria, it is hardly an exaggerati­on to say that the worst is far from over for the people of Raqqa. Currently, there is no effective administra­tion, people live in isolation, constantly on alert for threats while the most rudimentar­y communicat­ion requires them to travel for hours through perilous territory. Raqqa been reduced to a primitive state where death lingers in the air and the only signs of modernity are the weapons wielded by the Kurdish fighters stationed there. Rebuilding it will take years and require a financial commitment that no party – especially in a time of war – is likely to make. Raqqa in its current state will be a shattered reliquary of the Syrian civil war for the foreseeabl­e future. The tragedy is that even that might not remain by the time Mr Al Assad is done with it.

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