Haidar Mohammed Ali/AFP/Getty Images |
According to The Associated Press, the prime minister put out a statement last week dismissing the concept of a wall around the city.
"Baghdad is the capital for all Iraqis and it's not possible for a wall or a fence to isolate the city," the original statement said, the wire agency reported.
But on Sunday, a spokesman for the prime minister confirmed the plans, saying that the so-called "wall" would add checkpoints in the city aimed at reducing ISIS routes used to bring in car bombs.
Brig. Gen. Saad Maan, a spokesman for Iraq’s Interior Ministry, originally announced plans for the so-called "wall" on Feb. 3, saying that work had begun on a 65-mile stretch. It was to be 10 feet high and and incorporate concrete barriers already in use, according to The New York Times.
"It's not a wall exactly," Maan said Sunday, according to the AP. "We have reduced the number of attacks inside Baghdad, but we are working to prevent them completely."
News about a potential wall sparked mixed reaction on Twitter:
#Iraq's PM @HaiderAlAbadi has reportedly rejected the army's decision to surround #Baghdad with a wall and trenches. pic.twitter.com/JdxlPGTyGD— Haidar Sumeri (@IraqiSecurity) February 7, 2016
Wow. It really is back to the Middle Ages: Iraq: Baghdad to Get a Security Wall and Trench https://t.co/VyHqVGXcMS— Jon Lee Anderson (@jonleeanderson) February 4, 2016
Baghdad is erecting a 10ft wall around the city- our open borders people need to tell them how that doesn't work.— El Halcon (@GaryLHawkinsII) February 3, 2016
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