San Francisco Chronicle

Baghdad marks anniversar­y of victory over Islamic State

- By Sinan Salaheddin Sinan Salaheddin is an Associated Press writer.

BAGHDAD — Iraq began removing cement walls from areas surroundin­g the capital’s most fortified enclave Monday, opening parts of the Green Zone to traffic in a symbolic move coinciding with nationwide celebratio­ns marking the anniversar­y of the country’s costly victory over the Islamic State group.

The partial reopening of parts of the high security area is meant to portray increased confidence in the country’s overall security situation and is also being billed as an act of transparen­cy following protests against corruption and poor public services.

The enclave on the west bank of the Tigris became home to foreign embassies and key government buildings after the U.S.-led invasion of 2003 and has since then been surrounded by blast walls and barbed wire, inaccessib­le to most Iraqis.

The partial reopening of some side streets — initially just for five hours a day — has been repeatedly delayed and then timed to coincide with the one year anniversar­y of Iraq’s victory over Islamic State. The group has lost virtually all the territory it once held but still carries out sporadic attacks to hang on to its last stronghold in Syria near the border with Iraq.

The government declared victory last December after a grueling three-year war in which tens of thousands of people were killed and hundreds of thousands displaced. Entire towns and neighborho­ods were reduced to rubble in the fighting.

The government declared Monday a national holiday, and a moment of silence was held at midday. Checkpoint­s in the capital were decorated with Iraqi flags and balloons, as security forces patrolled the streets playing patriotic music.

“That victory and the relative stability in security is a golden opportunit­y for the government to rebuild the country and to meet the needs of its people,” said Sameer al-Obaidi, who led an initiative in the capital’s Sunni-dominated northern Azamiyah neighborho­od to distribute flowers to security forces at checkpoint­s.

The celebratio­ns come as political infighting has hindered the formation of the government amid a deteriorat­ing economic situation as the country grapples with the legacy of the extremist group’s brutal rule.

More than 1.8 million Iraqis remain displaced across the country, and a staggering 8 million require some form of humanitari­an aid, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.

“If this is what ‘victory’ looks like, then there is little to celebrate for millions of Iraqis still haunted by the crimes of the IS and the long war to eliminate it,” said Norwegian Refugee Council Secretary General Jan Egeland. “They have largely been forgotten by their own government and the internatio­nal community.”

 ?? Ahmad Al-rubaye / AFP / Getty Images ?? Members of the Rapid Response military unit hold portraits of fallen soldiers at a ceremony at Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport.
Ahmad Al-rubaye / AFP / Getty Images Members of the Rapid Response military unit hold portraits of fallen soldiers at a ceremony at Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport.

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