Syrian football players rebuilding lives and careers in Iraq as tables turn

In the past Iraqi footballers would escape to Syria, but the opposite holds true as the latter continues to be engulfed in brutal civil war

Members of Syria's national football team warm up during an official training session a day ahead of the 2018 World Cup qualifying football match between Syria and Australia at the Hang Jebat Stadium in Malacca, on October 4, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / NAZRULHAD HASHIM
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A decade ago, Iraqi footballers used to take refuge in neighbouring Syria to pursue their career, but the tables have turned in the tumultuous world of Middle East conflicts.

Nadim Sabagh remembers the Iraqis who played at Tishrin, his club in the northern metropolis of Aleppo that was to turn into a hotspot in Syria's devastating conflict.

Today, he has signed up for a second season with Al Zawra, a leading side in the Iraqi capital.

The 32-year-old Syrian international quit his country back in 2011 at the outset of the war and first played for Arbil, the biggest club in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Fellow Syrian Mahmud Khadduj held out four years longer before joining him in exile.

He says he "remembers very well" days when they would be training at the stadium of Ittihad, another Aleppo side, "as rockets and bullets rained down".

Back in 2015, as Aleppo was being pulverised in clashes between government forces and rebels, as well as by jihadists and Russian air strikes, Khadduj decided to call it a day.

His escape came in the form of a contract with a club in Karbala, a city south of Baghdad.

Iraq and Jordan playes observe a moment of silence ahead of a friendly at Basra in June. Football is being played across Iraq. Haider Mohammed Ali / AFP
Iraq and Jordan playes observe a moment of silence ahead of a friendly at Basra in June. Football is being played across Iraq. Haider Mohammed Ali / AFP

"I wasn't the only one. Several of my teammates joined clubs outside Syria," said Khadduj, a midfielder who has now signed up with Naft Al Wassat, a leading club in the Iraqi league.

With entire blocks in several cities reduced to rubble by the six-year-old conflict, many football stadiums have suffered the same fate, leaving players and staff redundant.

Many players have gone abroad because "we have no other job to make a living", Sabagh, in an orange shirt marked with the No 32 on the back, said at a training session in Baghdad.

At the Iraqi Air Force Club's Al Jowa Al Jawiya Stadium in Baghdad, the Syrian accent of deputy coach Mohammed Aqil came through loud and clear as he instructed his players.

The 35-year-old former coach of Aleppo's Ittihad explained that sports facilities back home have taken a battering.

"Today, Syrian football is trying to come back to life after years of having stadiums rendered useless because of fighting or their team dispersed," either into exile or by taking sides in the conflict, he said.

Syria football fans watch the FIFA World Cup 2018 qualification football match between Iran and Syria on a large screen at the Al-Jalaa stadium in Damascus on September 5, 2017.
For the first time in Syria's conflict, sport has come to the defence of the deeply-fractured country's unity, with regime backers and foes alike dreaming of World Cup 2018 qualification. / AFP PHOTO / LOUAI BESHARA
Syria's football fans had something to celebrate about after their team qualified for the World Cup play-offs. Louai Beshara / AFP

For Hussein Jawid, 28, who played with Al Huriya, another Aleppo club, there is no going back.

In Baghdad, where relative calm reigns although bomb attacks are not uncommon, Jawidsaid he has found "stability" since moving in 2012 and hopes to play out the rest of his career with Al Zawra.

For some players, Iraq is a stepping stone to more lucrative and high-profile careers in Saudi Arabia or Kuwait.

Alaa Al Shibli, after spells in Kurdistan and Baghdad, has hit the jackpot, joining the mighty Zamalek in the Egyptian capital Cairo, a club crowned champions of Africa several times.

In a spectacular run for Syrian football, the national team made the play-offs for the 2018 World Cup in Russia, narrowly losing out to Australia this month.

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Sabagh and Jawid have repeatedly taken leaves of absence from their Iraqi clubs to don the Syrian national jersey in the qualifiers.

The Syrian players have bittersweet memories of their homeland which they are still keen to represent.

"Before going to training, I opened Facebook and discovered that one of my teammates who I loved had been killed," said Nassuh Nakdali, 24, who comes from Aleppo but now plays for Naft Al Wassat in Najaf.

Mahmud Khadduj, his teammate who represented Syria for two years until 2015, recalls how he used to train at Ittihad "under a hail of rockets and bullets".

"My heart has always been and will always remain with the Syrian team," Khadduj said.