San Francisco Chronicle

After win, few ready to pay for rebuilding

- By Susannah George and Lori Hinnant Susannah George and Lori Hinnant are Associated Press writers.

MOSUL, Iraq — For nearly 2½ miles along the western bank of the Tigris River, hardly a single building is intact. The warren of narrow streets of Mosul’s Old City is a crumpled landscape of broken concrete and metal. Every acre is weighed down by more than 3,000 tons of rubble, much of it laced with explosives and unexploded ordnance.

It will take years to haul away the wreckage, and this is just one corner of the destructio­n. The Iraqi military and U.S.-led coalition succeeded in uprooting the Islamic State across the country, but the cost of victory is nearly incalculab­le.

Three years of war devastated much of northern and western Iraq. Baghdad estimates $100 billion is needed nationwide to rebuild. Local leaders in Mosul, the biggest city held by Islamic State, say that amount is needed to rehabilita­te their city alone.

So far no one is offering to foot the bill. The Trump administra­tion has told the Iraqis it won’t pay for a huge reconstruc­tion drive. Iraq hopes Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries will step up, and Iran may also take a role. The United Nations is repairing some infrastruc­ture in nearly two dozen towns and cities around Iraq, but funding for it is a fraction of what will be needed. As a result, much of the rebuilding that has happened has come from individual­s using personal savings to salvage homes and shops as best they can.

Nearly every city or town in former Islamic State territory needs repair to one degree or another. The longer it takes, the longer many of those who fled Islamic State or the fighting remain uprooted. While 2.7 million Iraqis have returned to lands seized back from the militants, more than 3 million others cannot and they languish in camps. Worst hit is Mosul; the United Nations estimates 40,000 homes there need to be rebuilt or restored, and some 600,000 residents have been unable to return to the city, once home to around 2 million people.

Corruption and bitter sectarian divisions make things even harder. The areas with the worst destructio­n are largely Sunni, while the Baghdad government is Shiite-dominated. The fear is that if Sunni population­s feel they’ve been abandoned and left to fend for themselves in shattered cities, the resentment will feed the next generation of militants.

 ?? Felipe Dana / Associated Press ?? Constructi­on workers carry a generator as a bulldozer removes debris from destroyed shops in Mosul.
Felipe Dana / Associated Press Constructi­on workers carry a generator as a bulldozer removes debris from destroyed shops in Mosul.

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