What remains of childhood when the war burned all dreams?
How to rebuild in the middle of the rubble of post-Daesh?
Since the fall of the "caliphate" of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, tens of thousands of Iraqi kids, recruited by the Islamic State or born of forced unions with jihadists, find themselves left to fend for themselves in the limbo of new Iraq: without identity cards, deprived of access to medical care and to school.
Journalist Anne Poiret, winner of the 2007 Albert-Londres Prize, whose shocking
post-war Mosul
(broadcast on Arte in 2019) looked at the difficult reconstruction of a country undermined by political rivalries and latent insecurity, courageously takes the road to Iraq to tell us, this time, the scars of the war through the eyes - and the drawings - of this new generation of people left behind.
Time bombs
With her, we go to meet these children of chaos rejected by society for atrocities
This article is for subscribers only.
You have 73% left to discover.
Subscribe: 1 € the first month
Can be canceled at any time
I ENJOY IT
Already subscribed?
Log in