When commenting on his recent visit to Iraq, Imam Sayed Moustafa Al-Qazwini repeatedly refers to the nation’s crumbling infrastructure and economy — sighing with a thousand-yard stare as he reflects on the “heartbreaking” conditions he witnessed first-hand.
The violence is bad, he says, but is limited to a few pockets of resistance around Baghdad and other regions.
He identifies the country’s real crisis — the one that stands to pull it apart — as its rapid economic nose dive, coupled with corruption and failure to reverse the trend.
“What’s really remarkable is the deteriorating condition of the community,” he said. “Services provided are still deteriorating, and that is shocking five years after the invasion. There is an energy problem, a trash collection problem, the sewage system is very bad, and there are no reliable decent health clinics.