COMMENTS: 21
Five Years Later, Fallujah is Still in Tatters
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Unemployment, and lack of medical care and safe drinking water in the city 60 km west of Baghdad remain a continuous problem. Freedom of movement is still curtailed.
The city suffered two devastating U.S. military attacks during 2004. Many of the buildings were destroyed, or heavily damaged. Several collapsed under the heavy bombing, and were never rebuilt. The heaps of concrete slabs and piles of rubble remain where they were.
"We wonder why we have been targeted by Americans since the first days of the occupation," Dr. Mohammad Abed from al-Anbar University told IPS. "This city sacrificed thousands of its citizens through five years of occupation just because they said 'no' to a project that threatens their country's future."
Now a less visible form of destruction is being spread, he said. "The new wave of destruction is represented by tearing the social tissue apart. The Americans are paying tremendous amounts of money to get people of Fallujah to fight each other."
The road into Fallujah from the main Amman-Baghdad highway is safer today, but nobody is allowed into Fallujah who is not from the city and can prove it by providing elaborate identity documentation. That can only be obtained by undergoing biometric identification by the U.S. military -- a process which includes retina scans, body searches and finger-printing before issuance of a bar-coded ID badge.
The city remains sealed. Many residents refer to it as a big jail.
"Being sealed for five years, Fallujah has lost all aspects of natural life," Ahmad Hamid, a former member of the city council told IPS. "A man who has lived most of his life mixing with British and American people told us in 2003 that we could not reach any agreement because they (Americans) look at Fallujah as a center of Iraqi people's unity. He told us Iraq would be divided into regions, provinces and even tribes, but we in the council did not listen to him."
The city remains tense in the face of power struggles and turf wars between tribal chiefs and Awakening group commanders, in Fallujah and in other areas of the volatile al-Anbar province. Disputes between the Iraqi Islamic Party and Awakening groups are also creating security tensions. The Awakening forces are former resistance fighters that the U.S. pays to be now on its side.
Beyond security, the health situation in the city is particularly difficult. A study conducted by two civil society organizations and the administration of Fallujah General Hospital over a two-year period was submitted to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees on Mar. 4.
The hospital administration and the two groups, the Conservation Center of Environment and Reserves in Fallujah and the Monitoring Net of Human Rights in Iraq, say that in 2006 they found "5,928 new illness cases that were unknown before in Fallujah," over 70 percent of which were "cancers and abnormalities" in children below 12 years of age.
"In the first six months of 2007 there were 2,447 cases, more than 50 percent of these cases were children. Simply, this means that most of the victims are children, and this will threaten the new generation in this city."
"Now we face death of all kinds," said a doctor at Fallujah General Hospital. "In addition to all known diseases, new ones are invading us. Blackwater fever for instance was an unknown disease in our area, but now it is spreading like fire in a forest. We have no medicines to give our patients, and the black market is flourishing.
"Our best doctors fled the city for fear of being detained by American and police forces just because they helped civilians during the two sieges of 2004. They are now considered terrorists or at least terrorist supporters, when they should have been decorated with medals for their heroic work in helping their people."
Medically speaking, "the siege is total," a doctor who gave his name as Dr. Kamal told the press recently, speaking of the lack of drugs, oxygen, electricity and clean water at Fallujah General hospital.
U.S. military officials say reconstruction is under way, and that aid is being provided to hospitals. People see little of that.
"The brutal destruction of Fallujah by the American army was not followed by any reconstruction, as if the city is being punished for its attitude against the occupation," said an engineer in Fallujah, Kaltan Fadhil.
Water and electricity supply, health facilities and roads were provided "in a way that only made some people who collaborated with Americans richer," he said. "It was no more than repainting some buildings to make them look nicer for a while, and then new contracts were announced to rehabilitate what was already rehabilitated."
(*Ali, our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with Dahr Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who has reported extensively from Iraq and the Middle East.)
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Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 16, 2008 2:14 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Published: April 13, 2008 at 2:16 PM
At least 500 Iraqi children are disabled or handicapped in the wake of U.S. assaults on Fallujah, a children's advocacy group says.
Alaa Hamed of the Society for the Welfare of Children said military operations in Fallujah, located about 40 miles west of Baghdad, caused "massive destruction," leaving at least 500 children under 5 mentally or physically handicapped, the Iraqi daily newspaper Azaman reported on its English-language Web site Sunday.
Hamed said his group reached out to international aid organizations to transfer the children to hospitals in Jordan for treatment, saying they were neglected by U.S. and Iraqi officials.
The U.S. military launched a massive assault on Fallujah in 2004 to drive out al-Qaida and other insurgent elements but the city has changed hands several times since then.
And there's more... from Rupert Murdoch's Sydney Morning Herald, we get this tasty interpretation, but you'll have to hold your stomach while you read this slop:
"Zobaie, 51, knows the nature of the men in black masks. He is a former insurgent. Now, as the police chief, he has turned against the insurgency, especially al-Qaeda in Iraq. The US military showcases Fallujah as a model city where US policies are finally paying off and is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in the region to promote nation-building efforts and the rule of law.
But the security that has been achieved is fragile, the result of harsh tactics recalling the rule of Saddam Hussein, who was overthrown five years ago. Even as they work alongside US forces, Zobaie's men admit they have beaten and tortured suspects to force confessions and exact revenge.
In the city's overcrowded, Iraqi-run jail, inside a compound that also houses a US military base and US police advisers, detainees were beaten with iron rods, the warden said. Many were held for months with no clear evidence or due process. They were deprived of food, medical care and electricity and lived in utter squalor, said detainees, Iraqi police and US military officers, who began to tackle the problems three weeks ago. Last summer, the warden said, several detainees died of heatstroke.
In Zobaie's world, to show mercy is to show weakness. In a land where men burn other men alive, harsh tactics are a small price to pay for imposing order, he said."
That reporter (Sudarsan Raghavan) was a stringer for the Nazi Propaganda Korps in a previous life, I believe.
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» RE: In related news... "Fallujah a model city, says U.S."
Posted by: Fish
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Posted by: Dboy on Apr 16, 2008 3:11 AM
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dboy
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» No . . .
Posted by: Scientz
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Posted by: PakiBoy on Apr 16, 2008 5:56 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The use of incendiary weapons prohibited for attacking civilians (Protocol III of Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons).
Not surprisingly, America, has refused to sign Protocol III.
Yeah, down with China, free Tibet! May be somebody ought to tell those retards out in SF that their country has killed over 1.2 million people in Iraq, and they are protesting against the wrong country.
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» RE: American barbarians used white phosphorous in Fallujah
Posted by: badkitty
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Posted by: sawdust on Apr 16, 2008 8:06 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: More discouraging words
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: Yardstick..?
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace
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Posted by: penobscotdziekuje@yahoo.com on Apr 16, 2008 11:01 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fallujah is a broken city filled with broken people with broken bones, broken homes, broken dreams, broken promises, broken streets that lead nowhere. It's cut off from the rest of the country as Leningrad was more than 60 years ago.
Is this what deomcracy means? They will have no voice in this "democratic" attempt.
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» RE: Warsaw Redux
Posted by: badkitty
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Posted by: djcrow22 on Apr 16, 2008 11:10 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is American democracy for you, the US military attacked Fallujah in April 2004 where women and children were shot along with wounded in marked ambulances. They were shot while trying to help the wounded,while going for water
and going to the hospital. This assault of course included the used of depleted uranium weapons. In November 2004, Fallujah was summarily leveled, again using depleted uranium weapons. Are we now surprised that there are 6000 new cases and thousands more to come of new unknown illnesses, 70% which are cancers and abnormalities? Just another unreported plague of radioactive death which will effectively kill thousands of Iraqi people in decades to come. Seems like a careful plan of genocide, where the remaining population will die or become slaves (employees) of the multi-national oil corporations who are patiently waiting for enough Iraqis to die off so they can reap their profits made possible by the military industrial complex. No doubt there will be many thousands of US military personnel sacrificed on the alter of capitalism. Larry Kudlow will be proud. So it goes for the shallow,uneducated,god fearing American public, the public described by Joe Bageant in "Deer Hunting with Jesus",the "bitter" public honestly described by Barack Obama, oblivious to the human genocide being committed at this very moment upon one of the oldest civilizations on earth.A civilization that had absolutely nothing to do with 9/11. As Oppenheimer once said,"Now I am become Death,the destroyer of worlds." And behold, there still is no shame...
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» RE: oversight
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Apr 16, 2008 12:13 PM
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Posted by: Crazy H on Apr 16, 2008 12:17 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Better off today..."
"Freedom..."
etc.
etc.
etc.
One problem is, the American Sheeple believe it when they hear it. The other problem is, that the Iraqi people living there know better. The blowback from Iraq will be enormous, and there will still be millions of idiot wingnuts blinking their eyes in surprise and asking "why do they hate us...?"
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» RE: "The surge is working"
Posted by: JadedEvan
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Posted by: willymack on Apr 16, 2008 12:37 PM
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Posted by: Andrew_S on Apr 16, 2008 1:40 PM
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Posted by: manderson on Apr 16, 2008 1:44 PM
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Posted by: edgeofnowhere on Apr 18, 2008 12:06 PM
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Posted by: thealltheone on Apr 18, 2008 1:27 PM
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