Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Iraqis in East Mosul both Fear and Hope for the Future | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Iraqi men play dominos at a cafe in the old city in west Mosul on July 30, 2017. SAFIN HAMED / AFP


Mosul- Iraqi merchants and shoppers jostle in the lively open-air market of Gogjali on the eastern edges of Mosul, their voices often drowned out by the honking horns of cars.

“Mosul will never be the same again,” sighs Yunes Abdullah, a 60-year-old former soldier who set up a stall to repair televisions and other electrical appliances.

Merchants and shoppers in Gogjali, one of the first areas to be retaken from the militants by Iraqi forces when they launched an offensive last October to recapture the country’s second city, have mixed feelings about what the future holds.

Some people blame the authorities for not doing enough to tackle the mammoth task of reconstructing the city, while others pray that the international community will be generous with funding.

“The government isn’t doing anything. It’s the people who clean the streets. Nothing has been rebuilt, not roads and not buildings,” Abdullah tells Agence France Presse.

His business partner Amar Akram agrees.

“My house was destroyed, and I don’t have any money to rebuild it. I don’t know who to turn to for help. Who should I speak to? There are thousands of people like me,” he says.

“They (the authorities) don’t help us because in their eyes we are all ISIS,” Akram adds.

Similar accusations can be heard throughout the market.

“They say we helped ISIS, but they know very well who allowed them to enter” the city, says a young tea-seller.

In June 2014, ISIS seized Mosul and routed Iraqi forces from the area, after what a parliamentary inquiry later found was a gross mismanagement of the crisis by Iraqi officials, who ignored ample warnings of an impending attack on the city.

In a part of the Gogjali market where merchants sell mobile phones and spare parts for cars, Abdullah says he mistrusts the authorities and claims they “embezzle” government funds.

But he does admit that “they are good at security”.

A client who overhears him jumps into the conversation with her own theory of how things should play out.

“The Americans must stay. They can influence things. When they speak we listen to them, unlike the Arabs who don’t respect each other,” says the seamstress in her 40s.

She says she had to “start back from zero” after fleeing the west side of Mosul, where Iraqi forces fought some of the fiercest battles before they could oust the militants.

Several kilometers away, life has also returned to the covered Nabi Yunis market in the city’s eastern side.

A wide array of merchandise is available, from clothing to fruit and vegetables, cheap perfume, hair dyes and remedies for losing weight in packaging showing svelte female bodies.

“There are more products and the prices have become reasonable,” says one male shopper. “Under ISIS, things were three times more expensive.”

Behind mounds of grapes, apples and pomegranates, Mohammed Jassem says people must be patient.

“The government has a lot to do, and time is needed to reorganize things and for life to return to normal,” he says.
“The priority should be to infrastructure: rebuilding hospitals, bridges and roads.”

Security and reconstruction will work hand in hand to woo back hundreds of thousands of residents who fled Mosul says lingerie merchant Omar Hayani.

“But financial aid from the international community will also be needed,” he tells AFP.

“The government does nothing” and is “letting people fend for themselves”, says the 32-year-old, who however adds that life has improved since the militants left. 

“I now feel free and happy,” he says.

Under the brutal rule of ISIS, Hayani was sentenced twice to being flogged because in his shop window he displayed “unauthorized” dummies, which he now proudly exhibits — draped in sheer dresses.

“We must hope,” says Hayani.

“If things don’t change, the war will return and everyone will leave.”