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In 2015, ISIL released a video showing its fighters destroying a series of reliefs, firing at them and hacking away at a statue with a pickaxe.

Five years after the defeat of ISIL, rehabilitation efforts suffer setbacks and many areas still bear the scars of the fight against the armed group that captured large parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria.

As Iraq gradually opens up to foreign tourism, dozens of visitors – particularly from the West – are now exploring the country, with some even venturing into Mosul.

The Hatra group are pioneers, visiting at a time when the United States, United Kingdom and other governments are warning their citizens against travel to Iraq, citing the risks of terrorism, kidnapping, armed conflict and civil unrest.

Religious tourism to the Shia holy cities of Karbala and Najaf has been thriving, mostly from Iran.

However, challenges remain and tourist infrastructure is still basic in Iraq, a country rich in oil but ravaged by decades of conflict. Since the US military intervention in 2003, the Middle Eastern country has become a battleground for competing militias jostling for control while its politics has been paralysed by sectarianism and corruption.