Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Iraq Divided: The Fight Against ISIL
As the US strikes ISIL targets in Iraq, we report from Irbil on the consequences of the latest foreign intervention.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) today controls as much as one-third of Iraq's territory, including the second largest city, Mosul.
Although the group's power and influence expanded in Syria, Iraq is where it was born during the nearly nine-year-long US occupation of the country.
Thus far, tens of thousands of people have had to flee their homes as ISIL captures towns and villages.
ISIL-held territory is tightly controlled, off-limits to even journalists and human rights workers.
As the US steps up its air campaign against the group, Fault Lines travels some 900km across Iraq to look at the consequences of the fight against ISIL.
While Kurdish fighters and Shia militias battle ISIL, we find that they are facing their own accusations of human rights abuses, including ethnic cleansing.
The attack on ISIL has created unlikely alliances. But as each group pursues its own interests, they are threatening to unravel Iraq and divide the country more than ever.
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