China Daily

Hot springs spa reopens amid Mosul war chaos

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HAMMAM AL-ALIL, Iraq — Some Iraqis in this town get massage sin as pa or take muddybath sand relax in the morning sun on the banks of the Tigris. Others beg for food or rise at dawn to queue for water.

Hammam al-Alil, a town south of Mosul once famous throughout Iraq for its healing hot waters, is back in business after a United States-backed offensive retook the area from Islamic State militants and authoritie­s reopened its spa.

This oasis of leisure now coexists, however, with camps housing more than 30,000 of the people displaced in the region by the campaign to dislodge IS from Mosul, its last major city stronghold in Iraq.

“I come here three times a week ,”said 47-year old Ali Qader, a retired soldier, after showering with water from a natural spring. “It’s refreshing and good for your skin.”

Residents have been flocking back since IS was expelled from the town in early November, ending the days when bathers had to wear a tunic covering them from knee to navel as part of the Sunni Muslim movement’s strict modesty code.

“If you had only swimwear, Daesh (the Arabic acronym for IS) would whip you,” said Wael Abdullah, 12, before diving into a pool.

“The hisbah came checking that everyone had the right dress,” he said, referring to the religious police that monitored everything from men’s beards to women’s veils.

Across the street is an indoor pool where locals and soldiers taking a day off from the front get a soapy massage.

The spa used to be magnet for wellness tourists and rheumatism patients but had passed its heyday even before the Islamist militants arrived in 2014.

“We used to have visitors from Baghdad, the south and even the Gulf, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia,” said Latif Mohammed, who was hired to help run the spa for 10,000 Iraqi dinars ($8.58) a day. “It was built in the ’80s but needs refurbishi­ng.”

The elegant hotels at the spa are now shuttered or bombed out because IS fighters used to live there. A machine gun nest at the entrance shatters any sense of normality.

Upgrading the baths is probably the last priority for officials who, just 2 kilometers away, also have to run one of the biggest camps for people fleeing the battle of Mosul.

While there’s plenty of hot water at the spa, women in the tent city rise early to queue for the water truck that comes once a day.

“We have some 200 spa visitors everyday, locals, soldiers,” said Mohammed, the spa worker. “There are also displaced people but many can’t afford the 1,000 dinars entrance fee.”

 ?? SUHAIB SALEM / REUTERS ?? A worker covers a customer with sand from a sulfur pond in the spa in Hammam al-Alil near Mosul, Iraq.
SUHAIB SALEM / REUTERS A worker covers a customer with sand from a sulfur pond in the spa in Hammam al-Alil near Mosul, Iraq.

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