Iraqi troops retake Ramadi from IS, reopen Baghdad road

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AFP, Baghdad :
 Iraq has completely retaken Ramadi from the militant Islamic State (IS) group, but now faces the enormous challenges of removing bombs, reestablishing basic services and rebuilding the shattered city, officials said on Tuesday.
Government forces recaptured areas on the eastern outskirts of the Anbar provincial capital from IS after weeks of fighting, and authorities say that all areas immediately surrounding the city have been retaken.
“All of Ramadi is now liberated” and responsibility for security is being handed over to local police, Anbar Governor Sohaib al-Rawi told journalists in Baghdad.
But the city’s civilian population has been displaced, and “the biggest challenge before us is clearing the areas of mines” so residents can return, Rawi said, adding that he hopes to obtain international support to remove explosives.
Lise Grande, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator for Iraq, said that clearing the city of explosives would cost an estimated $15 million.
“The key right now is to extract the IEDs (improvised explosive devices). This is the single largest, most difficult obstacle preventing people from coming home and rebuilding their lives,” said Grande, speaking at a roundtable alongside Rawi.
But the city’s problems go far beyond bombs.”The level of destruction in Ramadi is as bad as anything we have seen anywhere in Iraq,” Grande said.
“Houses are destroyed, bridges are destroyed, roads are infested with IEDs, water systems are ruined, schools are ruined, health centres are ruined and businesses are shut,” she said.
Initial work will be in the Tamim area of southwestern Ramadi, and will include repairing the water system and six health centres, as well as providing six ambulances and dozens of generators, Grande said.
“”The level of destruction in Ramadi is as bad as anything we have seen anywhere in Iraq,” Grande said.
“Houses are destroyed, bridges are destroyed, roads are infested with IEDs, water systems are ruined, schools are ruined, health centres are ruined and businesses are shut,” she said.
Initial work will be in the Tamim area of southwestern Ramadi, and will include repairing the water system and six health centres, as well as providing six ambulances and dozens of generators, Grande said.
The second phase will focus on central Ramadi, and will include repairing water stations, bringing in three mobile electrical grids and connecting them to hundreds of generators, she said.
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