Arab model, Baghdad now world's worst city
May 22 IANS
As recently as the 1970s, Baghdad was lauded as a model city in the
Arab world. But now, after decades of seemingly endless conflict, it is
the world's worst city.
That is, at least, according to the latest survey by the Mercer
consulting group, which when assessing quality of life across 239
cities, measuring factors including political stability, crime and
pollution, placed Baghdad last.
The Iraqi capital was lumped with Bangui in the conflict-hit Central
African Republic and the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince, the latest
confirmation of the 1,250-year-old city's fall from grace as a global
intellectual, economic and political centre.
Residents of Baghdad contend with near-daily attacks, a lack of
electricity and clean water, poor sewerage and drainage systems, rampant
corruption, regular gridlock, high unemployment and a myriad other
problems.
“We live in a military barracks,” complained Hamid al-Daraji, a paper
salesman, referring to the ubiquitous checkpoints, concrete blast walls
and security forces peppered throughout the city.
“The rich and the poor share the same suffering,” the 48-year-old
continued. “The rich might be subjected at any moment to an explosion, a
kidnapping, or a killing, just like the poor. “Our lives are ones where
we face death at any moment.”
It was not always so for the Iraqi capital.Construction of the city
on the Tigris River first began in 762 AD during the rule of Abbasid
caliph Abu Jaafar al-Mansur, and it has played a pivotal role in Arab
and Islamic society ever since.
In the 20th century, Baghdad was held up as a gleaming example of a
modern Arab city with some of the region's best universities and
museums.
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