Torture rooms, booby traps and baby strollers: Adrienne Arsenault in the streets of ISIS's former capital
CBC's Adrienne Arsenault and Jean-Franois Bisson travelled to the devastated Syrian city of Raqqa shortly after its liberation and found the remnants of ISIS from abandoned strollers to powerful narcotics to live explosives, all clues to the monstrous evil inflicted during the group's rule.
Traces of the Islamic State and the 'stench of the dead' remain in Raqqa
The Syrian city of Raqqawas once the de facto capitalof the ISIS's self-styled caliphate, but U.S.-backed Syrian forces celebrated last month as theydrove the extremists from the city.
- Raqqa in Ruins: an interactive map and photos
- 'So many dead': Adrienne Arsenault inside Raqqa's ruins
CBC'sAdrienne Arsenault and Jean-Franois Bissontravelled to the devastated city shortly after its liberation and found the remnants of ISIS from abandoned strollers to powerful narcotics to live explosives, all clues to the monstrous evil inflicted there.
Click the video above to see the destruction and the emotional scars ISIS left in its wake.