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Embarrasing Jubilation

Robin | 09.04.2003 13:30

Its hard to say your wrong

Dancing in Baghdad's streets
News Headlines: World



Published: 09-Apr-03; 13:53
By: ITN




Hundreds of Iraqi civilians danced and cheered in the streets of Baghdad as Saddam Hussein's iron grip on the city appeared finally to be broken.

Looters raided the administration's offices, abandoned shops and government residences in the capital, taking furniture and food.

In parts of Baghdad, men, women and their children were pictured cheering and giving "victory" signs to foreign TV cameras.

One man, who appeared to be in his late 50s, tore down a picture of Saddam Hussein wearing his trademark military beret and sunglasses.

The man took off his shoe and used it to beat the image of the dictator's face openly in the street - a great insult in the Arab world

"This is the criminal, this is the infidel," he said. "This is the destiny of every traitor ... he killed millions of us. Oh people, this is freedom."

According to reports, government officials fled the city earlier in the day, and Saddam's controversial information minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf cancelled his morning press briefing.

Some areas of Baghdad east of the River Tigris remained eerily quiet, and were still reportedly in the control of Saddam's loyalists.

But elsewhere, men, women and children ran and danced in Baghdad's dusty streets, carrying office chairs, sacks of grain and other supplies on their backs.

John Irvine, ITV News Middle East correspondent, the first reporter to meet US Marines in Baghdad, said Iraqis were hurling stones at pictures of Saddam outside the HQ of the secret police.

Others were dousing the images in petrol and setting them ablaze.

He asked one of the Marines in the city how it felt to be there. The soldier replied: "Pretty good. It's nice to represent marines here. We entered Baghdad last night, but have just got to the centre now. The reception has been great."

For the first time foreign journalists working in Baghdad were able to work without being monitored by Iraqi officials.

TV pictures showed US soldiers seemingly at ease as they walked along roadsides, many with their rifles dropped to their sides.

Other scenes showed hundreds of Iraqis waving their guns in the air, while those without weapons took up branches and waved their clothing in displays of approval.

ITV News correspondent Ian Glover James said the scenes of celebration and looting had turned ugly in some places.

"Initially (it was) very good-natured. We saw a crowd ransacking what had been a government intelligence headquarters.

"But on our return on the way out, the scene had turned rather more ugly.

"There was a man standing in the middle of the road with a very heavy calibre machine gun, the kind of thing that's mounted on an armoured vehicle normally.

"There was at least one corpse on the ground and it did look like the crowd that had been busy looting had had an altercation and gunfire had ensued."

Among the chants being shouted by the jubilant citizens of Baghdad were "Saddam is god's enemy", and other reports said Iraqis were also shouting "Good, good Bush".

As news of the jubilation in Baghdad spread across Iraq, civilians in Basra and Arbil joined in celebrations of their own.

US and British officials cautiously welcomed the news. But coalition commanders warned that there could still be significant opposition and more fierce battles as loyalist fighters continued to defend Baghdad.

Robin

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Don't gloat too soon

09.04.2003 14:10

US-backed militia terrorises town
By Charles Clover in Najaf

Published: April 8 2003 19:48 | Last Updated: April 8 2003 19:48

Hay Al Ansar, on the outskirts of Najaf in Iraq, was glad to be rid of Saddam Hussein's Ba'ath party government, when the city was seized by US forces last week.

But they appear to be just as terrified, if not more so, of their new rulers - a little-known Iraqi militia backed by the US special forces and headquartered in a compound nearby.

The Iraqi Coalition of National Unity (ICNU), which appeared in the city last week riding on US special forces vehicles, has taken to looting and terrorising their neighbourhood with impunity, according to most residents.

"They steal and steal," said a man living near the Medresa al Tayif school, calling himself Abu Zeinab. "They threaten us, saying: 'We are with the Americans, you can do nothing to us'."

Sa'ida al Hamed, another resident, said she witnessed looting by the ICNU and other armed gangs in the city, which lost its police force when the government fled last week. One man told a US army translator on Monday that he was taken out of his house and beaten by ICNU forces when he refused to give them his car. They took it anyway.

If true, the testimony of residents reveals a darker side to US policy in Iraq. In their distaste for peacekeeping and eagerness to hand the ruling of Iraq back to Iraqis, US forces are in danger of losing the peace as rapidly as they have won the war.

US special forces said they were looking into the complaints, which had been passed to them by US military sources. They declined, however, to discuss the formation of the group, how its members were chosen, or who they were.

The head of the ICNU, who says he is a former colonel in the Iraqi artillery forces who has been working with the underground opposition since 1996, announced on Tuesday that he was acting mayor of Najaf, and his group had taken over administration of the city.

Other Iraqi exiles, brought in by the CIA and US special forces to help assemble a local government over the next few days, say the militia is out of control.

"They are nobody, and nobody has ever heard of them, all they have is US backing," said an Arab journalist.

Abu Zeinab said the ICNU "has no basis in this city, we don't know who they are". He said the residents, who are predominantly Shia Muslims, followed only Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, leader of much of the Shia world, who lives in the city.

Ayatollah Sistani has so far refused to meet representatives of US forces and has made no public pronouncements on co-operating with the US military. Associates say he is "waiting for the situation to become clearer".

Hassan Mussawi, a Shia cleric who helps lead the ICNU, said reports of looting by his group were untrue - fabricated by religious extremists to discredit his movement.

He said his group was seeking to arrest former Iraqi government officials and "collaborators" with Mr Hussein's regime.

"If they do not resist arrest we hand them over to the Americans. If they resist then we take measures accordingly."

The allegations against the ICNU threaten to undermine much of the goodwill built up by US forces among the citizens of Najaf, who still cheer troops driving through the city. In an effort to curb rampant looting, US forces have begun to patrol at night.

They will not be undertaking police functions, but "if we come upon looting, we will try to control the situation and disperse those doing the looting," said Lt Col Marcus De Oliveira, of the 101st Airborne Division.

The city's political rivalries appear to be affecting humanitarian assistance. US special forces have objected to certain Shia leaders distributing food aid, for fear of their ties to Iran.

Sixteen truckloads of food from the Kuwait Red Crescent Society is being distributed according to a ration plan drawn up by the Iraqi Ministry of Commerce for the United Nation's oil for food programme.

US forces are also trying to get running water and power returned to the city, by bringing in a 2.5MW generator from Kuwait to restart the city's power plant, which was shut off by Iraqi forces.

Hussein Chilabi, father of a family of six in Chilabat, on the outskirts of Najaf, said that until running water was restored, his family would have to drink from canals. "The children are sick in their stomachs from drinking this water. We need running water more than food, more than anything right now."

Still anti-war
- Homepage: http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c=StoryFT&cid=1048313570322&p=1012571727088


half of the story

09.04.2003 14:16

there were a few hundred shi'ites cheering US tanks...in a town of 5,000,000 i dunno how much that means. if, say, a fundamentalist islamic country invaded and captured london you'd get a few thousand fundamentalists cheering them...but it wouldn't mean that 'london is jubilant'

but...it is good to see people tearing down saddam's statues etc...he and the US/UK have been responsible for massive suffering in iraq for ages and it's great to see them rid of at least one of their enemies...

how the majority sunni population in baghdad will react is a different matter, but not one which will interest the propagandists in the media, they've got their story...

hk


Rageh Omar in Baghdad

09.04.2003 14:49

Baghdad :: Rageh Omaar :: 1435GMT

The American flag was put on the head of the statue, like a hood. There was a huge applause. I turned to one of my Iraqi friends and he said he wouldn't forget this moment for the rest of my life. It was the ultimate humiliation.

BBC


Please pay attention

09.04.2003 23:58

The split screen broadcast of jornalist and vision of cheering Iraqi's both tell different stories.
If you pay attention you will see the vision is looped, repeating the same edited scenes over and over. If such cheering was wide spread such propergander would not be manufactured. They feed you shit and you eat it.
while you chew on that remeber the iraqi footage of cheering pro saddamist, OK out of fear? if they don't cheer they get shot, well darling the fear is still there...

Jon Wood


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