UAE to rebuild iconic Mosul mosque
UAE will put forward $50.4 million (41.2 million euros) for the task
BAGHDAD: The United Arab Emirates and Iraq on Monday launched a joint effort to reconstruct Mosul’s Great Mosque of Al Nuri and its iconic leaning minaret, ravaged last year during battles to retake the city from militants.
During the ceremony at Baghdad’s National Museum, UAE Culture Minister Noura Al Kaabi said her country would put forward $50.4 million (41.2 million euros) for the task.
“THE ive-year project Is not Just About rebuilding the mosque, the minaret and the infrastructure, but also about giving hope to young Iraqis,” she said.
“THE millenia-old Civilisation must be preserved.” The deal was signed by Kaabi and her Iraqi counterpart, Faryad Rawanduzi, in the presence of Unesco’s Iraq representative Louise Haxthausen.
“This is an ambitious, highly symbolic project for the resurrection of Mosul and Iraq,” said Haxthausen. “The work has already begun, the site is now protected... we must irst CLEAR THE site, remove THE rubble (and) document, before we can begin reconstructing the mosque and its minaret.” The famed 12th century mosque and its leaning minaret — dubbed “the hunchback”, or Al Habda, by locals — was destroyed in June 2017.
The Iraqi army accused Daesh group of destroying it with explosives as Iraqi forces steadily retook ground in the embattled city.
Kaabi, the Emirati minister, called on the international community “to unite to protect universal heritage sites, especially those in our Arab region” in theatres of Conlict. THE Al Nuri mosque is named after Nureddine Al Zinki, who once ruled over Aleppo and Mosul and ordered the construction of the mosque in 1172. Al Habda, which maintained the same structure for nine centuries, was one of the only remnants of the original construction.