<p>Iraqi shopkeeper Ahmad Riad is busy again serving customers at a Mosul market four years after the city was destroyed in battles against jihadists, but he still awaits war reparations.</p>.<p>"Life has gradually resumed," said Riad, who runs a shop selling rice, pasta and tins of tomato paste in the Corniche market, along the banks of the Tigris river.</p>.<p>"But we have not received any compensation from the government."</p>.<p>Mosul, the country's second city in Nineveh province, was the last major Iraqi bastion of the Islamic State group's failed "caliphate" between 2014 and 2017.</p>.<p>The city was retaken by the Iraqi army and a US-led coalition after intense bombardment and fighting that left it in ruins.</p>.<p>The market was "devastated" in the battles, Riad said, with shopkeepers using their limited savings to rebuild.</p>.<p>"We are the ones who paid," he said.</p>.<p>Of the 400 stalls that once crammed the market, just a tenth have returned to business, he added.</p>.<p>According to official sources, the cost of reconstruction for Nineveh would top $100 billion, a staggering sum for a country mired in an economic crisis.</p>.<p>It outstrips the total annual budget of oil-rich Iraq, which stands at nearly $90 billion in 2021.</p>.<p>Many buildings are still in ruins, their facades dotted with bullet holes and piles of rubble lie strewn all around.</p>.<p>When Pope Francis visited Mosul last March, he held a mass with the partially collapsed walls of the centuries-old church behind him.</p>.<p>On Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to visit Mosul, a day after attending a regional summit in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, some 355 kilometres (220 miles) to the south.</p>.<p>Mosul, capital of Nineveh province, is a melting pot of diverse ethnic communities and was once one of the key cities on the Middle East trade route, lying close to both Turkey and Syria.</p>.<p>Ammar Hussein runs a restaurant.</p>.<p>"The government should compensate the merchants who suffered damage so that they can rebuild their stores and the market can return to its former glory," he said.</p>.<p>The list of claims is long.</p>.<p>Some 100,000 claims have been filed by those who suffered damage during "liberation operations", according to Mahmud al-Akla, director of Nineveh's compensation department.</p>.<p>Not even three percent have been paid: while more than 65,000 files have been examined, just 2,600 claimants have received cash, he said.</p>.<p>On top of that, the centralised nature of the Iraqi state -- and the graft-riddled bureaucracy that governs it -- means that disbursements are paid out extremely slowly.</p>.<p>Mosul district chairman Zuhair al-Araji blames officials in Baghdad.</p>.<p>Progress is patchy.</p>.<p>While 80 percent of basic infrastructure such as sewers and roads have been restored, only around a third of health facilities have been rebuilt, according to Araji.</p>.<p>Mosul resident Saad Ghanem filed a claim for his destroyed home.</p>.<p>"As far as I know, the compensation department in Nineveh finalised the transaction and then submitted it to the government in Baghdad," he said. "They still have not compensated us."</p>.<p>Mosul, a Sunni Muslim city, did not take part in October 2019 popular protests decrying corruption and government misuse of power in Baghdad, as well as much of the country's Shiite south.</p>.<p>Residents said they feared the benefit of reconstruction could be wiped out by the unrest.</p>.<p>With parliamentary elections in two months, the slow pace of reconstruction prompted Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi to visit earlier this month.</p>.<p>Kadhemi said he was "sorry" to see the problems, ordering a committee to draw up an "action plan".</p>.<p>At his wooden furniture store, carpenter Ali Mahmoud said he is exhausted.</p>.<p>"I hope to rebuild my workshop, which was my livelihood, and return here," he said. "But I don't have enough money."</p>
<p>Iraqi shopkeeper Ahmad Riad is busy again serving customers at a Mosul market four years after the city was destroyed in battles against jihadists, but he still awaits war reparations.</p>.<p>"Life has gradually resumed," said Riad, who runs a shop selling rice, pasta and tins of tomato paste in the Corniche market, along the banks of the Tigris river.</p>.<p>"But we have not received any compensation from the government."</p>.<p>Mosul, the country's second city in Nineveh province, was the last major Iraqi bastion of the Islamic State group's failed "caliphate" between 2014 and 2017.</p>.<p>The city was retaken by the Iraqi army and a US-led coalition after intense bombardment and fighting that left it in ruins.</p>.<p>The market was "devastated" in the battles, Riad said, with shopkeepers using their limited savings to rebuild.</p>.<p>"We are the ones who paid," he said.</p>.<p>Of the 400 stalls that once crammed the market, just a tenth have returned to business, he added.</p>.<p>According to official sources, the cost of reconstruction for Nineveh would top $100 billion, a staggering sum for a country mired in an economic crisis.</p>.<p>It outstrips the total annual budget of oil-rich Iraq, which stands at nearly $90 billion in 2021.</p>.<p>Many buildings are still in ruins, their facades dotted with bullet holes and piles of rubble lie strewn all around.</p>.<p>When Pope Francis visited Mosul last March, he held a mass with the partially collapsed walls of the centuries-old church behind him.</p>.<p>On Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron is expected to visit Mosul, a day after attending a regional summit in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, some 355 kilometres (220 miles) to the south.</p>.<p>Mosul, capital of Nineveh province, is a melting pot of diverse ethnic communities and was once one of the key cities on the Middle East trade route, lying close to both Turkey and Syria.</p>.<p>Ammar Hussein runs a restaurant.</p>.<p>"The government should compensate the merchants who suffered damage so that they can rebuild their stores and the market can return to its former glory," he said.</p>.<p>The list of claims is long.</p>.<p>Some 100,000 claims have been filed by those who suffered damage during "liberation operations", according to Mahmud al-Akla, director of Nineveh's compensation department.</p>.<p>Not even three percent have been paid: while more than 65,000 files have been examined, just 2,600 claimants have received cash, he said.</p>.<p>On top of that, the centralised nature of the Iraqi state -- and the graft-riddled bureaucracy that governs it -- means that disbursements are paid out extremely slowly.</p>.<p>Mosul district chairman Zuhair al-Araji blames officials in Baghdad.</p>.<p>Progress is patchy.</p>.<p>While 80 percent of basic infrastructure such as sewers and roads have been restored, only around a third of health facilities have been rebuilt, according to Araji.</p>.<p>Mosul resident Saad Ghanem filed a claim for his destroyed home.</p>.<p>"As far as I know, the compensation department in Nineveh finalised the transaction and then submitted it to the government in Baghdad," he said. "They still have not compensated us."</p>.<p>Mosul, a Sunni Muslim city, did not take part in October 2019 popular protests decrying corruption and government misuse of power in Baghdad, as well as much of the country's Shiite south.</p>.<p>Residents said they feared the benefit of reconstruction could be wiped out by the unrest.</p>.<p>With parliamentary elections in two months, the slow pace of reconstruction prompted Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi to visit earlier this month.</p>.<p>Kadhemi said he was "sorry" to see the problems, ordering a committee to draw up an "action plan".</p>.<p>At his wooden furniture store, carpenter Ali Mahmoud said he is exhausted.</p>.<p>"I hope to rebuild my workshop, which was my livelihood, and return here," he said. "But I don't have enough money."</p>