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War on Iraq

Republic of the Green Zone

By Riverbend , Baghdad Burning. Posted June 27, 2005.


For the typical Iraqi, the Green Zone symbolizes the heart of the occupation. It tells us that while we may be citizens of our own country, portions of Iraq no longer belong to us.
Green Zone
Iraq's former Revolutionary Command Council Building is now surrounded by basketball courts as part of the Green Zone.
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The cousin, his wife S. and their two daughters have been houseguests these last three days. They drove up to the house a couple of days ago with several bags of laundry.

"There hasn't been water in our area for three days..." The cousin’s wife huffed as she dragged along a black plastic bag of dirty clothes. "The water came late last night and disappeared three hours later... what about you?"

Our water had not been cut off completely, but it came and went during the day.

Water has been a big problem in many areas all over Baghdad. Houses without electric water pumps don't always have access to water. Today it was the same situation in most of the areas. They say the water came for a couple of hours and then disappeared again. We're filling up plastic containers and pots just to be on the safe side. It is not a good idea to be caught without water in the June heat in Iraq.

"I need to bathe the children and wash all these clothes," S. called to me as the older of the little girls and I hauled out their overnight bag. "And the sheets -- you know nothing has been washed since last weeks ajaja..."

We call a dust storm an "ajaja" in Iraq. I don't think there's a proper translation for that word. Last week, a few large ajajas kept Baghdad in a sort of pale yellow haze. What happens when an ajaja settles on the city is that within a couple of hours, the air becomes heavy and thick with beige powdery sand. Visibility decreases during these dust storms and it often becomes difficult to drive or see out the window.

On such occasions, we rush about the house shutting windows tightly in a largely futile attempt to keep dust out of the house. For people with allergies or asthma, it's a nightmare. The only thing that alleviates the situation somewhat is air conditioning. The air feels a little less dusty when there's an air conditioner pumping cool air into the room.

One dust storm last week was so heavy, E. slept for a couple of hours during its peak and woke up with little beige-tipped lashes from the dust that had settled on his face while he was dozing. You can even taste the dust in the food sometimes. These storms can last anywhere from a few hours to several days.

After the ajaja is over and the air has cleared somewhat, we begin the cleaning process. By this time, the furniture is all covered with a light film of orangish dirt, the windows are grimy, and the garden, driveway and trees all look like they have recently emerged from a sea of dust. We spend the days after such storms washing, wiping, polishing and beating dust out of the house.

"I've been dying to wash the curtains and sheets since the ajaja..." S. breathed, pulling out dusty curtains from the plastic bag. She paused suddenly, a horrific idea occurring to her, "You have water, right? Right?"

We had water, I assured her. I didn't mention, however, that there had been no electricity for the better part of the morning and the generator was providing only enough for the refrigerator, television and a few lights. The standard washing machine consumed too much water and electricity -- we would have to use the little 'National' washing tub, or 'diaper machine' as my mother called it.

The pale yellow plastic washing tub is a simple device that is designed to hold a few liters of water and to swish around said water with a few articles of clothing tossed in and some detergent. Next, the clothes have to be removed from the soapy water and rinsed separately in clean water, then hung to dry. While it conveniently uses less water than the standard washing machine, there is also a risk factor involved -- a sock or undershirt is often sacrificed to the little plastic blade that swishes around the water and clothes.

We spent some of yesterday and a good portion of today washing clothes, rinsing them and speculating on how our ancestors fared without washing machines and water pumps.

The electrical situation differs from area to area. On some days, the electricity schedule is two hours of electricity, and then four hours of no electricity. On other days, it's four hours of electricity to four or six hours of no electricity. The problem is that the last couple of weeks, we don't have electricity in the mornings for some reason. Our local generator is off until almost 11am, and the house generator allows for ceiling fans (or "pankas"), the refrigerator, television and a few other appliances. Air conditioners cannot be turned on and the heat is oppressive by 8am these days.


Digg!

Riverbend is an Iraqi blogger based in Baghdad.

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Go Riverbend!
Posted by: meprieb on Jun 27, 2005 6:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am so excited to see this article on Alternet. I have been a reader of Riverbend's blog for a while now, and always wished that more people in the US would get exposure to it. Perhaps more US officials could consider the war and occupation from the perspective of the occupied, they would feel a more urgent need to come up with real solutions to the Iraq problem.

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» RE: Go Riverbend! Posted by: Riverside
» RE: Go Riverbend! Posted by: meprieb
Dear Riverbend
Posted by: susan9390 on Jun 27, 2005 8:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for the eye-opener. I feel now the way I felt after reading Dahr Jamail's "A Correspondent Comes Home." Not that it will do any real good, but it might boost morale to say to Iraq that this country has lost control of our leaders.

I SUPPORT IRAQ'S RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION, and if I could, I would give you the entire military appropriation so that you could hire the help you choose to rebuild your country the way you think best.

Many of us with open eyes wish we could close them again and make the horror go away, but we can't, and it won't, and we don't know what to do! I know that's why there are not more comments here. We suffer with you under a burden of remorse for a wrong unrectified, and we are ashamed of the actions of our so-called leaders.

If you think that a morale boost would do any good, please encourage those Iraqis with enough English to correspond and access to the internet to come to www.propeace.net and click on Reach Across the Ocean. We would at least like to hold you in our hearts.

Al Salam Alikum
"Blue in a Red State"

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Curtis
Posted by: Curtis on Jun 27, 2005 10:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Green Zone has to have something to do with the Wizard of Oz and the yellow brick road. Dorthy where are you now when we need you?

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provocations
Posted by: Iranian-Shi'ite on Jun 27, 2005 10:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article calls the building of new bases "provocations."

I can certainly see that. I don't think that they are intended as provocations; but how can those responsible for their building not see that they will be implicitly interpreted as provocations?

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This is worse than Saddam's reign
Posted by: Iranian-Shi'ite on Jun 27, 2005 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Consider the following quote from the story:

"but there are dozens of people being rounded up for no particular reason. Almost every Iraqi family can give the name of a friend or relative who is in one of the many American prisons for no particular reason. They aren't allowed to see lawyers or have visitors and stories of torture have become commonplace."

This is as bad or worse than the reign of terror that Saddam inflicted.

I wonder how the U.S. conservatives can congratulate themselves on occupying Iraq. How can they call it a liberation? Their cognitive functions evade my most ardent attempts to understand it objectively.

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» RE: This is worse than Saddam's reign Posted by: Iranian-Shi'ite
"Is This the End of Our Beginning, Or the Beginning of our End?"
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jun 27, 2005 1:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The way the U.S. is going, in a few years, the whole nation will resemble the Green Zone in Iraq: a little fortress surrounded by an entire society that hates it – only then, that society will be most of the rest of the world.

We fall ever deeper in debt to China, while China flexes its ever-growing economic muscles, and forms alliances with Russia and India. We manage to enrage the ENTIRE Middle East, from which we get more than a quarter of the oil that keeps our greedy consumer-culture crankin'. We've turned Iraq into a finishing school for terrorists, where they can not only get basic training, like in Afghanistan, but can do Master-level graduate work as insurgents in a real urban setting in Baghdad. We've turned many, many places around the world into vast sweat-shops, again to feed our greed for cheap products, at the expense of those laborers' lives. We've even managed to turn off much of Europe with our flaunting of international standards of behavior and our lack of regard for human decency.

Does the name "Custer" mean anything to these ideological idiots in Washington? What's it gonna be like if a quarter of our oil is cut off, East Asia marginalizes us as an economic power, and newly-trained terrorists fresh out of the University of Counterculture, Iraq, floats a nuclear bomb into New York or San Pedro Harbors?

Bush has said that he's concerned about how history 30 years from now will consider his presidency. Thanks to his presidency, there might not BE history 30 years from now – or anyone left who can read it.

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Ty
Posted by: hotlipsin61 on Jun 27, 2005 5:02 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you, riverbend. I am one American who is deeply sorry for what has transpired in your country. All the death and destruction was so unnecessary. Life is hard for many of you and I wished this nightmare would end.
Even a simple task as doing laundry is an adventure in hygeine; here we don't give it a second thought. And the idea of water being on for period at a time is stressful! This sounds like the siege of Leningrad.
At this point Iraq is a dying land overran by MEN with guns and bad intentions-on both sides. So much for the shock and awe. How much more grief can you all take?
American and British energy and security companies are making an enormous profit from the misfortune and they seem not to care. So riverbend, I share in your sorrow over the loss of life and property, and I hope Iraq will be freed from this illegal occupation.

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