''Let me describe the scene on the ground here in “liberated” Iraq.''
by Dahr Jamail - Url.:
http://dahrjamailiraq.com
My friend from Baquba visited me yesterday. He brought the usual giant lunch
of home cooked food he always brings when he comes to see me. I’m still eating
it, actually. I had it again for dinner tonight. Ah, the typical Iraqi meal.
He owns four large tents, and rents them to people in his city to use at
funeral wakes, marriage parties, tribal negotiation meetings and to cover
gardens, among other things.
During the Anglo-American invasion of his country back in the spring of 2003,
when refugees from Baghdad sought shelter from the falling bombs, many of the
families inundated his city. After his house was filled with refugees, he let
others use his tents, for free of course.
Refugees from Fallujah are using them now.
At least 35 US soldiers have died in Iraq today. 31 of them died when a
Chinook went down near the Jordanian border. At least four others died in
clashes in the al-Anbar province. A patrol on the airport road was bombed,
destroying at least one military vehicle. The military hasn’t released any
casualty figures on that one yet.
“Bring ‘em on,” said George Bush quite some time ago, when the Iraqi
resistance had begun to pick up the pace.
Today, during a press conference he spoke about the upcoming elections in
Iraq.
“Clearly there are some who are intimidated,” he said,
“I urge alls (not a typo) people to vote.”
Let me describe the scene on the ground here in “liberated” Iraq.
With the “elections” just three days away, people are terrified. Families are
fleeing Baghdad much as they did prior to the invasion of the country. Seeking
refuge from what everyone fears to be a massive onslaught of violence in the
capital city, huge lines of cars are stacked up at checkpoints on the outer
edges of the city.
Policemen and Iraqi soldiers are trying to convince people to stay in the city
and vote.
Nobody is listening to them.
Whereas Baghdad is filled with Fallujah refugees, now villages and smaller
cities on the outskirts of Baghdad are filling up with election refugees.
Yet these places aren’t safe either. In Baquba attacks on polling stations are
a near daily occurrence. Mortar attacks are common on polling stations even as
far south as Basra. A truck bomb struck a Kurdish political party headquarters
in a small town near Mosul, killing 15 people, wounding twice that many. A
string of car bombs detonated at polling stations in Kirkuk, which was already
under an 8pm-5am curfew, killing 10 Iraqis.
Here in Baghdad, although the High Commission for Elections in Iraq has yet to
announce their locations, schools which are being converted into polling
stations are already being attacked.
Iraqis who live near these schools are terrorized at the prospect.
“They can block the whole city and people cannot move,” says a man speaking to
me on condition of anonymity, “The city is dead, the people are dead. For
what? For these forced elections!”
He is angry and frustrated because his street is now blocked as he lives near
a small yellow middle school that is going to be used as a polling station.
Nearby some US soldiers are occupying a police station, as usual. One of them
saw me taking photos and tried to confiscate my camera.
It didn’t matter that I showed him my press badge. After some talking he let
me delete the photos and move on, camera in hand.
Sand barriers block the end of a street, the school where the insides are
already in disrepair sits just behind them.
At least 90 streets in Baghdad are now closed down by huge sand and/or
concrete barriers and razor wire. The number is growing daily.
“Now I’m afraid mortars will hit my home if the polling station is attacked,”
he adds. He’ll be moving across town to stay at a relative’s house, which is
not near one of the dreaded polling stations.
An owner of a small grocery shop nearby is just as concerned. He had to
negotiate with soldiers to have them leave an opening on the end of the
barrier so people could access his place of business.
“I’m already living off my food ration, and have little business,” he says
while pointing at the deserted street, “Now who wants to come near my shop?
All of us are afraid, and all of us are suffering now.”
A tired looking guard standing nearby named Salman chimes in on the
conversation. “I would be crazy to vote, it’s so dangerous now,” he says with
a cigarette dangling from his hand, “Besides, why vote?
Of course Allawi will stay in. The Americans will make it so.”
A contact of mine just returned from spending a week in Fallujah. We shared
some of the food brought from my friend in Baquba.
“I’d been in Fallujah for a week and all I’d seen was tough military tactics,”
he tells me, “They are arresting people and putting them in these trucks,
blindfolded and tied up. Everywhere I looked all I saw was utter devastation.”
He spoke with many families who told him one horror story after another, death
after death after death.*
[FPF - 'Making Dead Friends" - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/5t9j7
]
“Then today, the military brings in a dozen Humvees and ground troops to
basically seal off a small area near a market,” he continues, “In the middle
of them is a CNN camera crew filming troops throwing candy to kids and these
guys in orange vests start cleaning the streets around them.”
He laughs while holding up his arms and says, “I’d never seen those guys
anywhere in the city before. I don’t know where they came from.”
After a pause to take a drink of soda he adds, “I’d never seen any boots on
the ground at all, and all of the sudden there are all these marines standing
around like everything was ok. It was the first time I’d seen any soldier not
in a Humvee or a Bradley. I was really surprised.”
“All of it was 100% staged. Good PR before the election,” he says. Then in a
reference to mainstream America he adds, “Fallujah is fine, now go back to
sleep.” [andend]
Posted by Dahr Jamail January 27, 2005
* 100,000 Civilian Deaths Estimated in Iraq - Washington Post - By Rob Stein -
Friday, October 29 - 2004 - Page A16 - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/4uh9e
Fwd. - in agreement - by:
FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
http://tinyurl.com/5uvtv
Editor : Henk Ruyssenaars
http://tinyurl.com/5uvtv
The Netherlands
FPF@Chello.nl
The Dutch author has this far worked abroad for 4 decades for international
media, as a foreign correspondent, of which 10 years - also during Gulf War I
- in the Arab World and the Middle East.
Seeing worldwide that every bullet and every bomb breeds more terrorism ! US
Senator Hollings agrees: "We have caused more terrorism than we have gotten
rid of" - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/2bqza
Former PM Kok - and other Dutch Government's war criminals heard in Court-Url:
http://tinyurl.com/662pp
-
It can be done!
Evil triumphs when good men, women and we journalists remain silent: -
http://tinyurl.com/3tgqa
-
Help the troops come home ! Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/3o6tr
- We need them badly to fight our 'governments':
http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/
HR
FPF-COPYRIGHT NOTICE - In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107, any
copyrighted work in this message is distributed by the Foreign Press
Foundation under fair use, without profit or payment, to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the information.
http://liimirror.warwick.ac.uk/uscode/17/107.html
Main Page - Friday, 01/28/05
Message Board by American
Patriot Friends Network [APFN]
APFN MESSAGEBOARD
ARCHIVES
