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After Islamic State, Mosul's Impoverished Residents Trade Scrap Metal to Make
a Living

by Rikar Hussein

   WASHINGTON/MOSUL, IRAQ --

   With his face, hands and clothes covered in dirt, 11-year-old Hassan
   Abdullah treks through the rubble of Mosul's Old City dawn to dusk,
   foraging for whatever pieces of scrap metal he can find.

   The boy carries a white sack full of electrical wires and other
   materials made of copper and aluminum. He retrieved them from under the
   rubble of destroyed buildings.

   Like many other residents in Mosul, Abdullah is trying to make a living
   by collecting and selling the scrap metal left behind from the fierce
   battle against the Islamic State in Mosul.

   "I come here every day early in the morning to earn a livelihood," he
   tells VOA while holding the heavy sack on his back with both hands,
   trying to keep it from falling on the ground.

   "This is my occupation now," the little boy says.

   WATCH: Mosul Children, Families Hunt Scrap Metal to Survive

   He takes the materials to specialized recycling stores and scrap
   dealers operating in an area that once used to sell jewelry in the
   city.

   Abdullah says he is especially interested in collecting aluminum, which
   earns him a little more money than other metals, such as cooper.

   "I sell 1 kilogram of aluminum for 4,000 or, sometimes, 5,000 dinars,"
   Abdullah adds. That is about $4, an amount that can buy him a meal for
   the day in a city where the local economy has stalled, for the most
   part, because of the impact of monthslong violent clashes in the city.

   IS occupation, ouster

   Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city and home to more than 1 million
   people, came under IS control in mid-2014.

   Months of IS occupation and the Iraqi battle to oust the terror group
   left thousands dead and reduced much of the city's western side to
   rubble. The United Nations estimates that 40,000 homes in the city need
   to be rebuilt or restored.

   The Old City, where Abdullah and dozens of other residents explore for
   scrap metal, used to be a densely populated district and Mosul's trade
   center before the IS occupation. However, the area is now full of
   shattered concrete and twisted metal that once were part of people's
   homes and shops.

   An assessment last year by the U.N. Human Settlements Program estimated
   5,390 of the 8,400 housing sites destroyed or severely damaged in Mosul
   were located in the Old City.

   The rubble of those destroyed buildings has now become a source of
   income for dozens of destitute residents.

   Shame of scavenging

   Many of those scavenger residents refuse to be interviewed. They say
   talking about such an issue brings shame upon them and their families.

   But the easy earnings obtained from collecting scrap metal, a job that
   needs no experience or special training, has prompted many to bring
   their entire families, including taking their children from school, to
   join in the rummaging.

   Another forager, 16-year-old Omar Abdulwahid, left school to join his
   family of five in collecting scrap.

   "I am young and I have my own needs. I collect aluminum from rubble to
   buy my needs," he tells VOA.

   Abdulwahid says that before the war broke out, he used to make $25 a
   day by working part time as a porter, helping shoppers carry their
   heavy goods. Now, he makes an average of $10 collecting recyclable
   containers, broken windows and doors.

   "I have no other choice in this desperate situation," Abdulwahid says.
   "This neighborhood provided us a livelihood before it was destroyed. I
   ask the authority to reconstruct it and create job opportunities for
   us."

   The Iraqi government said the reconstruction and normalization of Mosul
   and other war-torn areas is a priority, but a task impossible to
   undertake without international support.

   Costly reconstruction

   Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said last month that his government
   would need up to $100 billion to rebuild his country and pleaded for
   help from donors and foreign investors.

   U.N. officials say the cost of stabilizing western Mosul areas and
   making them livable again could surpass $700 million.

   "It's a huge amount of money. We know we cannot provide it through our
   own budget," Abadi told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
   last month.

   An international conference, expected to take place in Kuwait, Feb.
   12-14, will focus on raising money for those areas through donations.
   But Iraqi officials say the donations are unlikely to meet the needs of
   the country.

   The improbable prospects to obtain enough funding for the
   reconstruction mean Mosul's Old City would likely remain a crumpled
   landscape of broken concrete and metal, at least for now.

   For impoverished residents like Abdullah and Abdulwahid it means they
   will probably have to continue scavenging for scrap metal to survive in
   the absence of economic opportunities.