Khaleej Times

Mosul in ruins a year after Daesh ouster

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mosul — A year after pro-government forces recaptured Mosul from the terrorist group Daesh, much of Iraq’s second city lies in ruins and many of its residents see little reason to celebrate.

“We were liberated but what have we come back to? Our homes have been destroyed,” said mother of seven Umm Mohammed.

On July 10, 2017, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi declared victory in the battle for the city after a nearly nine-month offensive against the militants.

The fiercest fighting took place around western Mosul’s Old City, where Umm Mohammed’s home near the Great Mosque of Al Nuri has been reduced to rubble.

The mosque, once a famous landmark with its leaning minaret, is

We were liberated but what have we come back to? Our homes (in Mosul) have been destroyed Umm Mohammed, Iraqi mother of five

where the militants’ elusive chief, “caliph” Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, made his only public appearance.

Militants used explosives to blow up the famed 12th century mosque as the army closed in on them last summer.

Like many mosques, houses, schools and other buildings across Mosul, all that is left of it is a pile of rubble.

Although life has gone back to normal in some parts of eastern Mosul, the massive clean-up of the western part of the city only began a few weeks ago.

In a report released this week, the Norwegian Refugee Council bemoaned conditions in the city.

“More than 380,000 people are still displaced in and around Mosul as the city lies in ruins with a staggering eight million tonnes of debris,” it said. No official festivitie­s were planned on Tuesday to mark the first anniversar­y of Mosul’s liberation from the brutal three-year rule of Daesh, which had used the northern city as the capital of its “caliphate” straddling the border with neighbouri­ng Syria.

Residents said they had little to celebrate.

“The huge destructio­n has emptied our joy of any meaning,” said Abu Ghassoon, a 44-year-old unemployed man who lives in east Mosul after his home in the west was destroyed.

Ghadir Ibrahim Fattah, 35, agreed.

“We had expected reconstruc­tion to begin immediatel­y after (the militants were ousted) but nothing happened, and this has demoralise­d the people,” he said. —

380K The number of people still displaced in and around Mosul

 ?? AFP ?? An Iraqi youth stands next to a car that has been decorated for the first wedding in the old city of Mosul a year after the city was retaken by the Iraqi government forces. —
AFP An Iraqi youth stands next to a car that has been decorated for the first wedding in the old city of Mosul a year after the city was retaken by the Iraqi government forces. —

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