Arab News

Years after Daesh defeat, northern Iraq struggles to rebuild

Without mentioning terror group, officials speak of ‘security risks’ which are delaying reconstruc­tion

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In Iraq, “maku” means “nothing,” and father-offive Issa Al-Zamzoum says “maku” a lot: No electricit­y, no home, no rebuilding and no job.

Eight years after heavy fighting between Daesh terrorists and the army, the reconstruc­tion of his war-ravaged village in northern Iraq is at a standstill.

“There is nothing here, no electricit­y,” 42-year-old Zamzoum sighed. “Even work, there is none.”

Zamzoum lives with his wife and family in Habash, some 180 km north of the capital Baghdad, a village dotted with dozens of bomb-blasted houses still ruined from intense fighting in 2014.

Part of their roof, which caved in during the bombardmen­t, still lies in crumbling and bullet-scarred wreckage.

In one room, a hen watches over her chicks. In another, filthy mattresses are piled up against the wall. The building does not even belong to Zamzoum: His own home was left uninhabita­ble.

While the Baghdad government eventually celebrated military “victory” over Daesh in December 2017, the scale of destructio­n was immense.

“Reconstruc­tion? We do not see it,” Zamzoum said gloomily. “Nothing has happened since the war.”

Habash paid a heavy price during Daesh’s siege of Amerli, a town less than 10 km away.

In 2014, the jihadists, who controlled the key northern city of Mosul and surroundin­g areas, moved south to attack Amerli, using surroundin­g settlement­s such as Habash as bases for their assault.

The combined forces of the Iraqi army, Shiite militias and Kurdish forces launched a counteratt­ack to break the siege with grueling street fighting, and Daesh forces were pushed out.

But for residents of the already hard-hit area, it was not the end of their suffering.

According to Human Rights Watch, after the siege “pro-government militias and volunteer fighters as well as Iraqi security forces raided Sunni villages and neighborho­ods” surroundin­g Amerli, including Habash.

HRW used satellite imagery to map “heavy smoke plumes of building fires, likely from arson attacks” in the village.

Today, nearly 20,000 people displaced by the conflict need

aid in the area, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council, an aid agency.

“Humanitari­an needs are significan­t,” the NRC said.

As well as basic needs like clean water and electricit­y, even obtaining identity papers is a challenge for many.

“Many people have been displaced across governorat­es and face major barriers to travel to obtain civil documents,” the NRC said.

“Others face security clearance issues related to perceived affiliatio­n with Daesh” group, it added.

Like most of the residents of Habash, Zamzoum’s neighbor Abdelkarim Nouri is a Sunni.

In Shiite-majority Iraq, Sunnis have sometimes been viewed with distrust, suspected of being complicit in past support of the extremists.

Daesh jihadists follow a radical interpreta­tion of Sunni beliefs.

“Our life is a shame,” Nouri said. “I don’t have a job. I have five sheep, and they are the ones who keep me alive.”

He said he had appealed to his member of parliament for support, but nothing had changed.

Nouri does not mention religion or talk of sectariani­sm — a deeply sensitive topic in a country where tens of thousands of people died during the bloody inter-religious conflict in 2006-2008.

Now, over four years since the end of Daesh’s self-proclaimed “caliphate” in Iraq, many Sunnis say they are victims of harassment and discrimina­tion.

A US State Department report last year cited concerns among Sunni officials that “government­affiliated Shiite militia continued to forcibly displace Sunnis.”

The report quoted officials describing “random arrests of Sunnis in areas north of Baghdad” and detentions made on suspicion of Daesh links.

In Salaheddin province, where Habash is located, officials speak of “security risks” which are delaying reconstruc­tion — without mentioning Daesh jihadists by name.

While Habash is under government control, the militants still operate just 15 km further north.

On the road that leads to the village of Bir Ahmed, forces of the Hashd Al-Shaabi — a Shiite-led former paramilita­ry coalition now integrated into Iraq’s state security apparatus — stand guard.

“The situation in Bir Ahmed is beyond our control and that of the army,” a senior officer said. “You can get in, but I can’t guarantee you can get out.”

 ?? AFP ?? Iraqi father-of-five Issa Al-Zamzoum stands outside his damaged house in the war-ravaged village of Habash, some 180 km north of Baghdad.
AFP Iraqi father-of-five Issa Al-Zamzoum stands outside his damaged house in the war-ravaged village of Habash, some 180 km north of Baghdad.

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