Iraqi federal police officers inspect weapons

A program to remove mines, explosives and booby traps left by Daesh forces in and around the Iraqi city of Mosul could cost $50 million, UN officials said on Tuesday.
The UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) had previously estimated costs for Iraq as a whole at $50 million this year, but said this could double because of Mosul.
“Looking at the contamination in Mosul we will need $50 million and $50 million for the rest of the country,” Paul Heslop, chief of UNMAS program planning and management section, told Reuters.
“Clearing IEDs and building clearances are a lot more dangerous than minefields. You need a higher level of technical skill and complex equipment and it’s slower. As areas are liberated, you get a better idea of the level of contamination,” he said.
More than three months into an offensive by Iraqi government troops and allied forces, the Sunni militants of Daesh have been driven from the eastern half of the city of more than a million people. 
“I could see Iraq needing an Afghanistan-style (demining) operation, which at its peak was 15,000 people about five years ago. You could put 5,000 on the ground in Iraq and they would be gainfully employed,” said Heslop, a veteran of conflicts from Afghanistan to Angola.
Since 2015, UNMAS has cleared 390 priority locations in Fallujah and Ramadi in Anbar province, removing more than 2,600 explosive hazards from areas reclaimed from Daesh.
Demining is an investment in stabilization, enabling people to return to their communities and to cultivate decontaminated land, as well as “an investment in youth at risk” UNMAS director Agnes Marcaillou told a news briefing.
“When we give them a job they are less likely to seek status and income, in a terrorist organization for instance,” she added.

Source: Arab News