Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh

Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh
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A general view of the Grand Al-Nuri mosque as rebuilding work continues in Mosul. (REUTERS)
Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh
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A drone view shows the city of Mosul as rebuilding work continues 10 years after Daesh militants seized control of the city and ruled for three years before being ousted by Iraqi forces and their allies. (REUTERS)
Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh
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Saqr Zakaria, the director of the Baytna Foundation, walks through the museum as rebuilding work continues in Mosul. (REUTERS)
Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh
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A general view of the Tigris River in Mosul (REUTERS)
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Updated 10 June 2024
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Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh

Iraq’s Mosul springs back to life 10 years after it fell to Daesh
  • UnderDaesh the city was rife with abductions, executions, crime. Minorities were killed, music banned, ancient sites destroyed
  • Now residents say city is at its most peaceful in 20 years with new bridges, souk, restaurants, cultural life i

MOSUL: It was the simple night-time act of watering flowers on his street in Mosul’s Old City that made Saqr Zakaria stop and think about just how safe this last bastion of Daesh militants had become since it was liberated in 2017.
“I thought for a second, ‘where am I?’” said Zakaria, who left the city in 2005 but returned to set up a cultural center, the Baytna Foundation, in 2018 at a time when thousands of bodies were still being cleared from the ruins.
The jihadist group declared its caliphate at the Grand Al-Nuri Mosque just down the road after taking Mosul a decade ago, imposing an extreme form of Islam that saw them kill members of minority groups, ban music and destroy archaeological sites.
The maze of alleyways in this part of the city on the west bank of the Tigris River became a site of regular killings, kidnappings and crime with the rise of Islamist insurgents after the 2003 US.-led invasion.
Much of it was pulverized, and thousands of civilians were killed, in the battle to free it.
But despite political infighting, allegations of corruption and delayed reconstruction, life is returning on both sides of the river.
Many of the more than two dozen people who spoke to a Reuters reporter on a four-night visit to the city said they felt more secure today than at any time in the last two decades.
“Life consisted of eating and sleeping and locking your door so you’re not kidnapped or killed or blown up. We were deprived, and today we are making that up,” said Zakaria. His foundation, housed in a traditional Moslawi home with an inner courtyard, has become a leading attraction for local and foreign visitors, including French President Emmanuel Macron in 2021.
Shortly after he spoke, an elderly man walked into the courtyard and shed tears at the sight of pictures, hung on a wall, of the city’s intellectual and cultural elite that harkened back to better days.
“This is Mosul,” said Nizar Al-Khayat, a former school director in his 70s, his voice wavering. “No matter what, it remains a cultured, civilized city.”
Local officials and residents say there is a long way to go before Mosul sheds the legacy of Daesh.
Rubble is still being cleared seven years after the city was liberated. Pockmarked buildings with collapsed floors and exposed rebar can still be seen around Mosul. The Old City is in ruins.
But bridges have gone up. New restaurants have opened where patrons tuck into Lebanese cuisine and sway their heads to the nostalgic sound of Syrian tenors.
A souk and curbside cafes by the river buzz with life late into the night, formerly unthinkable in a city where people locked themselves in their homes by late afternoon.
Even as the city works to restore basic infrastructure, it is focused on expanding green areas and touristic attractions like a new riverside corniche, said Firas Al-Sultan, a technical adviser to Mosul municipality.
Monuments to the city’s rich inter-faith history, like the Grand Nuri Mosque and the Al-Tahera Church visited by Pope Francis in 2021, are being rebuilt. (Reporting by Timour Azhari and Khalid Al-Mousily in Mosul, Editing by William Maclean)


UN rules out role in US-backed foundation’s Gaza aid operation

UN rules out role in US-backed foundation’s Gaza aid operation
Updated 4 sec ago
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UN rules out role in US-backed foundation’s Gaza aid operation

UN rules out role in US-backed foundation’s Gaza aid operation
  • UN participates in aid operations if they are in accordance with its basic principles, spokesperson says

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations on Thursday ruled out involvement with a new US-backed foundation for aid to Gaza, as Israel’s months-long blockade brings severe shortages to the war-battered territory.
“I made it clear that we participate in aid operations if they are in accordance with our basic principles,” said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.
“As we’ve stated repeatedly, this particular distribution plan does not accord with our basic principles, including those of impartiality, neutrality, independence, and we will not be participating in this,” he added.
The US State Department said last week the non-governmental foundation would soon announce its plans, effectively sidelining the UN.
Israel has imposed a blockade for over two months on Gaza, leading UN agencies and other humanitarian groups to warn of shrinking fuel and medicine supplies to the territory of 2.4 million Palestinians.
Since returning to office in January, US President Donald Trump has stopped the vast majority of the country’s international assistance.
Israel has already leveled most of Gaza’s buildings following militants’ unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack on the country.
But it has rejected claims that a humanitarian crisis is unfolding and has vowed to increase pressure on Hamas.
Israel has long criticized involvement of the UN, seeing it as biased, and has banned work of the UN agency that supports Palestinian refugees.
Little is known about the new organization, although a listing in Switzerland showed the establishment in February of the “Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.”
Swiss newspaper Le Temps earlier reported that the foundation was looking to hire “mercenaries” to work in the distribution of aid, sparking alarm in Amnesty International’s Swiss chapter.
Haq said: “The UN have a plan, an excellent plan, that is ready to be implemented as soon as we’re allowed to do our work.”
“I’ve talked about how we have trucks ready to go. We have more than 171,000 metric tons of food, on top of other life-saving supplies, and they’re ready to go the minute that Israel opens the gates,” he added.
But Danny Danon, Israel’s ambassador to the UN, called on UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres to “recalculate” the body’s approach to what would be a “major” operation.
He added that Israel would not be contributing to its costs, but would allow it to go ahead.
“We will not fund those efforts. We will facilitate them,” he said.
“We will enable them. Some of them will have to cross through territory that we operate, but we will definitely not fund them.”


At UN Nakba commemoration, Palestinian president urges action on Gaza

At UN Nakba commemoration, Palestinian president urges action on Gaza
Updated 36 min 20 sec ago
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At UN Nakba commemoration, Palestinian president urges action on Gaza

At UN Nakba commemoration, Palestinian president urges action on Gaza

UNITED NATIONS: Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, at a UN event Thursday commemorating the Nakba, urged more action to end the war in Gaza, linking the historical displacement during Israel’s creation to the current conflict.

The United Nations has since 2023 commemorated the “Nakba” — “catastrophe” in Arabic — which refers to the flight and expulsion of an estimated 700,000 Palestinians during the creation of the State of Israel in 1948.

This year the anniversary is particularly painful, as Palestinians say history is being repeated in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

Tens of thousands have been killed in Gaza and an aid blockade threatens famine, while Israeli leaders continue to express a desire to empty the territory of Palestinians as part of the war sparked by Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 attack.

“History is indelible and justice is not time bound,” Abbas said in a speech read out here by the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour.

“Today we stand before you, not only to commemorate the somber anniversary, but to renew the pledge that the ‘Nakba’ was not and will not be the permanent and inevitable faith of our people.”

Abbas said the war Israel has been waging for 19 month is a continuation of the “Nakba,” with the world standing by as Israel engages in “genocide” and starvation.

He said Israel’s goal was to remove the Palestinians from Gaza and steal land that should be part of a sovereign Palestinian state.

“The time has come for real and effective international action to stop this historic injustice and ongoing tragedy which has become a disgrace to humanity,” Abbas said.

The UN General Assembly is scheduled to hold a conference in June to promote a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. It will be co-sponsored by France and Saudi Arabia.

“Peace will require tangible, irreversible and permanent progress toward the two-state solution, an end to the occupation and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state, with Gaza as integral part,” said Khaled Khiari, assistant secretary-general for the Middle East, Asia and the Pacific.

 


Satellite images show Israel’s aid distribution hubs under construction in Gaza

Satellite images show Israel’s aid distribution hubs under construction in Gaza
Updated 59 min 52 sec ago
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Satellite images show Israel’s aid distribution hubs under construction in Gaza

Satellite images show Israel’s aid distribution hubs under construction in Gaza
  • BBC Verify says satellite images show work underway on sites believed to be part of Israeli’s control of aid supplies
  • Israel has cut all aid into the territory since March, leading to increasing fears over famine

LONDON: Israel has started building distribution hubs in southern and central Gaza under plans to control aid supplies in the territory, the BBC reported on Thursday. 

Satellite images showed four sites being prepared in Gaza, including three near Rafah in the south.

Israel cut off all aid supplies into Gaza in March after ending a ceasefire and resuming widespread bombing of the devastated territory.

Israel said that it will only allow aid into Gaza once it has prepared its new distribution system and taken over operations from the UN and aid groups. 

Aid agencies warned last week that the Israeli plans will increase suffering and death in Gaza. The plan is also staunchly opposed by Arab and European governments.

The report by BBC Verify said that analyzes of the satellite images showed land had been cleared, with new roads and staging areas prepared in recent weeks.

The sites are similar in size and design to existing distribution hubs in Gaza. 

One of the sites in the south is near a new Israeli military base, and images from early April showed a large staging area and new road surrounded by defensive berms 650 meters from the border with Egypt.

An image from May 8 showed earth-moving machinery working on an eight-hectare area of land.

Images from May 11 and May 12 showed the three other sites expanding, with one located half a kilometer from UN warehouses. 

An imagery intelligence analyst told the BBC that the sites were likely to be secure distribution centers and that some were in “close proximity to IDF forward operating bases, which ties in with the IDF wishing to have some control over the sites.”

The newly created US-backed NGO, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, said on Wednesday that it would begin work distributing humanitarian aid in Gaza this month but has urged Israel to resume aid flow immediately through the existing distribution systems.

The Israeli plans to focus the distribution hubs in the south has led to accusations that Israel aims to force the Palestinian population into that area.

Meanwhile, the humanitarian situation has become even more desperate, with food security experts warning this week that Gaza will soon descend into famine if the blockade is not lifted.


Major Palestinian hospital in Gaza out of service due to Israeli attacks

Major Palestinian hospital in Gaza out of service due to Israeli attacks
Updated 58 min 52 sec ago
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Major Palestinian hospital in Gaza out of service due to Israeli attacks

Major Palestinian hospital in Gaza out of service due to Israeli attacks
  • Gaza European Hospital is the only remaining facility providing medical follow-up for cancer patients
  • Intensive care units for premature infants lack incubators, respirators and oxygen supplies, and are at risk of shutdown

LONDON: A major Palestinian hospital in the southern Gaza announced it was out of service on Thursday after Israeli attacks damaged its facilities.

The Gaza European Hospital in Khan Younis has sustained extensive damage due to Israeli bombings, impacting the building’s sewage network and internal medical departments, and destroying the roads that lead to it.

The hospital has 28 intensive care beds, 12 incubators, 260 hospital beds, 25 emergency beds and 60 oncology beds; however, all are out of service, Wafa news agency reported.

The Gaza European Hospital is the only remaining facility providing medical follow-up for cancer patients in the Gaza Strip, after Israeli forces destroyed the Turkish Friendship Hospital in March.

Medical sources told Wafa that the hospital can no longer provide specialized services such as neurosurgery, thoracic surgery, a cardiac catheterization center, cardiovascular surgery and ophthalmology.

Intensive care units for premature infants in the hospital lack incubators, respirators and oxygen supplies, and are at risk of complete shutdown due to a severe diesel shortage to operate power generators. The hospital warned that premature infants in incubators are at risk of malnutrition, medical complications and even death, Wafa reported.

The hospital urged humanitarian and health organizations to urgently provide essential medical supplies, fuel, power generators and nutritional support.

Since March, Israel has prohibited the entry of humanitarian aid and relief into the Gaza Strip as it resumed military actions in the area. Reports indicate that 57 children have died from malnutrition-related causes since then.

Additionally, UN-backed food security experts have warned that hunger and malnutrition have sharply intensified since the onset of the Israeli aid relief blockade in March.


HRW: Israel’s Gaza blockade has become ‘tool of extermination’

HRW: Israel’s Gaza blockade has become ‘tool of extermination’
Updated 15 May 2025
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HRW: Israel’s Gaza blockade has become ‘tool of extermination’

HRW: Israel’s Gaza blockade has become ‘tool of extermination’
  • “Israel’s blockade has transcended military tactics to become a tool of extermination,” HRW interim executive director Federico Borello said
  • Israel said the pressure aimed to force Hamas to free hostages in Gaza

BEIRUT: Human Rights Watch said on Thursday that Israel’s total blockade of the Gaza Strip, in place since March 2, has become “a tool of extermination.”

“Israel’s blockade has transcended military tactics to become a tool of extermination,” HRW interim executive director Federico Borello said in a statement.

Israel blocked all aid from entering Gaza on March 2, before resuming its military operations on March 18 after talks to prolong a six-week ceasefire collapsed.


Israel said the pressure aimed to force Hamas to free hostages in Gaza, most of them held since the Palestinian Islamist movement’s unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack.

Israel denies that a humanitarian crisis is unfolding in Gaza.

In its statement, HRW said that “the Israeli government’s plan to demolish what remains of Gaza’s civilian infrastructure and concentrate the Palestinian population into a tiny area would amount to an abhorrent escalation of its ongoing crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansing, and acts of genocide.”

For weeks, humanitarian organizations and the United Nations have warned that supplies of everything from food and clean water to fuel and medicine are reaching new lows.

Borello also criticized “plans to squeeze Gaza’s 2 million people into an even tinier area while making the rest of the land uninhabitable.”

The UN estimates that 70 percent of Gaza is now either an Israeli-declared no-go zone or under evacuation order.