Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Syria begins rebuilding even as ruination persists

- BASSEM MROUE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Albert Aji of The Associated Press.

HOMS, Syria — In Homs’ landmark Clock Square, where some of the first anti-government protests began in Syria in 2011, stands a giant poster of a smiling President Bashar Assad waving his right arm, with a caption that reads: “Together we will rebuild.”

Four years after the military brought most of the city back under Assad’s control, the government is launching its first big reconstruc­tion effort there, planning to erect hundreds of apartment buildings in three neighborho­ods in the devastated center of the city.

It is a small start to the task of rebuilding Syria, where seven years of war, airstrikes and barrel bombs have left entire cities and much other infrastruc­ture a landscape of rubble. The government estimates that reconstruc­tion will cost some $200 billion dollars and last 15 years. As in neighborin­g Iraq, which faces a similar swath of destructio­n after the war against the Islamic State group, no one is offering much to help fund the process.

Moreover, destructio­n is still being wreaked. For the past 10 days, government forces have been relentless­ly bombarding eastern Ghouta, a collection of towns on Damascus’ edge, in a push to crush rebels there. Hundreds have been killed and even more buildings have been blasted to rubble in a community already left a wasteland by years of siege.

At the same time, only 6 miles away on the other side of Damascus, government workers have begun clearing rubble from Daraya, another suburb wrecked by a long siege, to begin reconstruc­tion.

The question of who will rebuild Syria has become part of the tug of war between Assad and his opponents.

The government can cover $8 billion to $13 billion of the reconstruc­tion costs, according to the Cabinet’s economic adviser, Abdul-Qadir Azzouz. So Damascus says it will need the internatio­nal community. But it also says only those who “stood by” Syria will be allowed to participat­e, a reference to allies Russia and Iran. That likely means lucrative rebuilding contracts will be handed to private companies from those countries, as well as probably China.

The internatio­nal community, in turn, faces a dilemma. It wants to stabilize Syria to allow for millions of refugees to return — the longer it takes, the less likely it becomes that they will go back.

But any support for reconstruc­tion in Syria would buttress Assad and be seen as contributi­ng to the normalizat­ion and legitimiza­tion of his government.

American officials say the U.S. will not work with Assad’s government, whose leadership they describe as illegitima­te.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of square miles remain a pile of bombed-out buildings and wreckage.

Recent Associated Press drone footage from Daraya outside Damascus and from the city of Aleppo in the north shows scenes of destructio­n reminiscen­t of World War II devastatio­n. East Aleppo, home to nearly 1.5 million before the war, is still largely empty and in ruins a year after it was recaptured from rebels. Smallscale renovation of government buildings and historical sites has barely begun to scratch the surface.

The Homs project gives an indication of the scale of the task. The plan, to begin later this year, focuses on three of the city’s most destroyed districts — Baba Amr, Sultanieh and Jobar — and will rebuild 465 buildings, able to house 75,000 people, at a cost of $4 billion, according to Homs’ governor, Talal al-Barrazi.

It was not immediatel­y clear how many housing units that entails — meaning individual apartments — but assuming an average of five people per household, that would be around 15,000 units. That’s under half of the 35,000 housing units that were estimated to have been destroyed in Homs. And it’s a small fraction of the 1 million housing units al-Barrazi said Syria will need.

For the past four years, any rebuilding has largely been the work of individual­s, with some help from the United Nations.

 ?? AP/HASSAN AMMAR ?? Rubble from war damage is removed in the Lairamoun district of Aleppo, Syria, in January.
AP/HASSAN AMMAR Rubble from war damage is removed in the Lairamoun district of Aleppo, Syria, in January.

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