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If London were Aleppo: Buckingham Palace would be destroyed

May 9, 2017 at 1:03 pm

Debris of buildings are seen after the Assad Regime carried out airstrikes in Aleppo, Syria on April 22, 2017 [Mahmud Faisal/ Anadolu Agency]

The bullet-riddled, bombed-out buildings of Aleppo may bear little resemblance to London’s gleaming skyscrapers but the two cities once had much in common, something German artist Hans Hack has seized on to bring home the reality of war.

Before Syria’s six-year civil war, Aleppo – like London – was its country’s biggest city, as well as a key commercial hub. But, unlike teeming London, half of Aleppo is now effectively a ghost town.

To bring the suffering home to those in Europe, data visualizer Hack has used United Nations satellite data of Aleppo’s destruction and created equivalent maps of London and Berlin.

For me it’s hard to understand in the news what it means, how strongly Aleppo was destroyed. I wanted to take this information and project it onto something I know personally that I can have some reference to. So I chose Berlin and London.

London suffered the same damage as Aleppo, entire neighbourhoods would be wiped off the map – in this alternative reality, Buckingham Palace, the Olympic stadium and the Tower of London are all rubble.

Read: Eight Syria Civil Defence workers killed in air strike

It’s an echo of what happened in Aleppo. When the Syrian army captured the city from rebels in December 2016, the area was in ruins.

A map showing what London would look like if it was bombed like Aleppo [hanshack]

A map showing what London would look like if it were like Aleppo [Hanshack]

What the map doesn’t show are the human casualties. Since Syria’s civil war began the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimates that Aleppo’s population fell from two million to 1.3 million just after people started returning to the city.

A drop of similar proportions in London would see about 4.3 million people killed or displaced.