The National - News

Aleppo will never be the same

After the rebels’ defeat comes the reality of what it means to live in the aftermath of war. Water is scarce and electricit­y supply intermitte­nt at best

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Midnight means lights out in Syria’s second city. As the clock strikes 12, overworked power generators shut off, plunging neighbourh­oods and heritage sites into darkness.

It will take many months and millions of dollars to breathe life back into Aleppo’s water, electricit­y, and transporta­tion networks.

Four years of fighting have transforme­d it from Syria’s industrial and commercial powerhouse to a divided and dysfunctio­nal city.

“We sold our vacuum cleaner – what’s the point in having one if we don’t have electricit­y?” said Umm Fayez, a housewife who lives in the central district of Furqan.

“It’s been two years since we used our washing machine. We wash everything by hand, but the water is too cold now and I can’t take it any more,” the mother of two said, sitting in the dark amid piles of dirty laundry. Forces loyal to president Bashar Al Assad declared full control over Aleppo last week, after a landmark evacuation deal ended years of clashes.

Rocket fire, air strikes and shelling partly or totally destroyed more than half Aleppo’s infrastruc­ture and buildings, according to a “preliminar­y, optimistic evaluation” by local authoritie­s.

The main power station at Safirah to the south-east has been off line for two years because of the fighting.

Aleppo’s residents are forced to rely on noisy generators that supply electricit­y through a web of cables.

But they are shut down at midnight to save diesel supplies. Umm Fayez’s husband walks home every night from his sweetshop using a small torch to guide the way through pitchblack darkness.

“We have two projects that will re-establish electricit­y to Aleppo,” an electricit­y ministry official said.

He said new power lines would be laid from the neighbouri­ng province of Hama within a year, but that it would cost more than four billion Syrian pounds.

Residents are also impatient for water shortages to end, with the main pumping station currently operating at just a third of its capacity. “We can only pump water to 20 per cent of Aleppo. Before the crisis, it was 70 per cent,” said Issa Korj, chief mechanic at the Suleiman Al Halabi water plant.

He said it would take “many months” to repair the facility, but even then, water provision was likely to remain a problem for residents. Most of the water pumped to Aleppo comes from the Euphrates Dam in the adjacent province of Raqqa, which is held by ISIL.

“They regularly cut off the water,” said Fakher Hamdo, who heads Aleppo’s water administra­tion.

He added that global economic sanctions imposed on Syria since 2011 make spare parts nearly impossible to import.

But before any major rebuilding projects can begin, local authoritie­s must clear away barricades and sand berms that had divided Aleppo between the rebel-controlled east and the government-held west.

Bulldozers can already be seen in the bombed-out streets, clearing rubble and dismantlin­g metal barriers.

“The municipali­ty immediatel­y mobilised to open up the main thoroughfa­res,” said city administra­tor Nadim Rahmoun.

“Opening up the roads will allow us to pump life back into the city with economic and social activity and public services,” he said.

Aleppo’s old city – a renowned Unesco World Heritage site – is at the heart of this effort.

The district suffered some of the most brutal moments of the battle for Aleppo, and restoring its celebrated buildings will pose major challenges.

Municipal teams are carefully sorting through the rubble, setting aside original, centuries-old stonework that will be used in the restoratio­n.

In the nearby district of Aqyul, Abduljawad Najed, 32, had to negotiate heaps of sand to check on his brother’s house.

“It took more than an hour and a half,” he said. After the barricades were cleared, the same journey took Mr Najed 10 minutes.

“Things were much easier and I was able to come by car,” he said, loading some household effects into his small pick-up.

 ?? George Ourfalian / AFP ?? Before any rebuilding projects can begin, authoritie­s must clear away the barricades that divided Aleppo between the rebel-controlled east and the government-held west.
George Ourfalian / AFP Before any rebuilding projects can begin, authoritie­s must clear away the barricades that divided Aleppo between the rebel-controlled east and the government-held west.

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