Torture rooms, booby traps and baby strollers: Adrienne Arsenault in the streets of ISIS's former capital

Traces of the Islamic State and the 'stench of the dead' remain in Raqqa

Media | In the ruins of Raqqa, the evil is in the details

Caption: Within days of ISIS fleeing the Syrian city of Raqqa, Senior Correspondent Adrienne Arsenault and cameraman Jean-François Bisson travel to Syria to see what ISIS left behind

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The Syrian city of Raqqa was once the de facto capital of the ISIS's self-styled caliphate, but U.S.-backed Syrian forces celebrated last month as they drove the extremists from the city.
CBC's Adrienne Arsenault and Jean-François Bisson travelled 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.