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In Occupied Fallujah, the Stench of Dead Bodies Fill the Air

 
 
Reply Sun 25 Apr, 2004 07:37 am
Fallujah Residents Report US Forces Engaged in Collective Punishment
by Dahr Jamail

Three families of refugees from the besieged city of Fallujah who are seeking refuge in the Al-Adhamiya neighborhood of Baghdad, described the conditions in the embattled city of Fallujah as "a horrible disaster." A man called Khaled Abu Mujahed, speaking from Fallujah on behalf of the Islamic Party, stated that while some relief supplies are getting inside the city, a great number of families remain trapped in their homes, and the stench of dead bodies has become overpowering.

Refugees streamed out of Fallujah when fighting began after United States Marines placed the city under siege, cut off power supplies and began an invasion of the city. Resistance forces referred to by locals as mujahideen fought back, killing scores of US troops. Americans killed hundreds of Iraqi civilians, plus an unknown number of Iraqi fighters.

Crowded inside an empty house in the Al-Adhamiya district of Baghdad, Abu Muher, patriarch of one family that left Fallujah last Saturday, told of a harrowing journey out of his home city. "We were nearly bombed by the Americans when we tried to leave on Friday," he said. "Bombs fell in front and behind us, so we had to turn back. Saturday we were lucky to escape."

Estimates of total refugees vary, but most reports suggest at least 60,000 Fallujans - or about a quarter of the city's population - have fled Fallujah for Baghdad and other cities.

Abu Muher said US warplanes were bombing the city heavily last Saturday prior to his departure, and that Marine snipers continued to take their toll, shot after shot, on residents of the besieged city. "There were so many snipers, anyone leaving their house was killed," he recalled.

Abu Muher, along with two other men from Fallujah who arrived in Baghdad last weekend, said American warplanes had dropped cluster bombs on a road behind their houses in Fallujah. One of the men was too afraid to permit his name to be used in this article. "My neighbors saw the bomblets," he said, "and I heard the horrible sound that only the cluster bombs make when they are dropped on us. My home was hit by their shrapnel. I was too afraid to leave my home to look for myself because of the snipers."

Abdul Aziz, the 15 year-old son of Abu Muher, stated, "I saw two of my neighbors shot by US snipers when I went outside one time. I also saw some of the small cluster bombs on the ground that were dropped by the warplanes of the Americans. Most times, we were too afraid even to look out of our windows."

Another refugee, speaking on condition of anonymity, angrily asked, "This is the way the Americans are freeing Iraq? America's freedom is killing Iraqis. Fallujah is becoming another Palestine. How long will we have to live like this?"

The three men stated that the city remains without electricity, and although they had running water, they used a generator most of the time.

Abu Muher's neighbor, a man named Abdel Salam, said medical relief was being delayed or prevented from reaching the people of Fallujah. "Sunday when we left the city, we saw an ambulance from the United Arab Emirates turned around from the main checkpoint by the Americans. Why are they not allowing ambulances into Fallujah?"

According to official US military statements, ambulances are being escorted into Fallujah on a regular basis. Reached for comment earlier this week, Christy Clemmons of the Coalition Provisional Authority press center for Iraq's Ministry of Health insisted emergency vehicles were reaching the city. "We are working with the Ministry of Health and have so far permitted 46 ambulances to Fallujah," she said. "The US military are escorting the ambulances since in the past they have been commandeered by insurgents and used to attack US soldiers."

Iraq Red Crescent Secretary General Faris Hamed told The NewStandard on Monday that no Red Crescent ambulances had been allowed into Fallujah since April 13, during the peak of fighting in the city. Hamed has been unreachable for an updated report.

A resident of Al-Adhamiya willingly cleared his home for these refugees and is housing them, free of charge. He donated food to them as well.

Speaking by phone today from inside Fallujah, Islamic Party spokesman Abu Mujahed, who is assisting in the distribution of aid as well as negotiations with the US military, said there is still a large number of civilians in Fallujah who cannot get out of the besieged city.

"So many people are lacking water, electricity and medical services," he said. "Most of the time nobody can get in or out of Fallujah."

Mujahed stated that yesterday the US military broke the supposed ceasefire by staging an incursion into the Julan neighborhood as well as the Industrial sector of Fallujah. He added, "This is a disaster! Only a few people can get to the main hospital because the Americans are controlling it. Snipers are firing into Julan and killing so many civilians."

US military reports said the assault on Julan was in response to attacks by insurgents. Battalian commander Lt. Colonel Brennan Byrne told the Associated Press he considered the insurgent activity to be a "major breach" of the agreement the US military says it brokered with resistance forces. The AP further reported that 20 Iraqis and no Americans were killed in the overnight skirmishes.

Mujahed said that supplies from throughout Iraq were being sent to Fallujah. He said they had even received aid shipments from the followers of the rebellious Shi'ite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr, and he felt the situation was uniting all Iraqis.

"Women are bringing their gold from Baquba, a man in a wheelchair from Kirkuk brought his wheelchair, then used crutches to leave after he donated it, and supplies are coming from Mosul, Adhamiya, Tikrit, Nasariyah, Baquba, everywhere in Iraq you can think of," Mujahed said.

The party official also reported that while 50 families were allowed to return to Fallujah Tuesday, only seven were permitted Wednesday. Many refugees report having found nowhere suitable to go outside their hometown.

The lockdown war ordered despite reports from Fallujah residents that many of the mujahideen have turned their weapons over to Iraqi Police as a condition of the ceasefire edict. Lt. Col. Byrne told the AP most of the weapons turned over in accordance with US demands were unusable and did not comply with the Marines' insistence on acquiring all of Fallujah's heavy weaponry.

In retaliation for the fighters' noncompliance, Byrne said the Marines would not permit any of the hundreds of Iraqis lined up at a nearby checkpoint to return to their homes, at least for the time being.

"We have at least 700 dead from the fighting," Mujahed reported from inside Fallujah. "So many of them are children and women. The stench from the dead bodies in parts of the city is unbearable."

He said US aircraft had bombed five houses in Julan the previous night, and the mujahideen have now taken positions and are waiting for the Marines to return for the full scale invasion the US has threatened.

Coalition spokesman Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt said that US Marines continue "aggressive patrols and offensive operations," in the Fallujah area, "as well as providing humanitarian assistance to the citizens of Fallujah." Iraqis interviewed for this story said they had only witnessed the former aspect of the dual role.

Copyright 2004 The New Standard. Reprinted with permission.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 1,034 • Replies: 16
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greenumbrella
 
  1  
Reply Mon 26 Apr, 2004 06:56 am
Fallujah: Armageddon by any other name?
0 Replies
 
John Webb
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 01:56 am
What are the Fallugahns complaining about? At least they are dying by fine decent American weapons and thanks to the great President Bush, rather than by the nasty evil ones of Saddam. Rolling Eyes
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MyOwnUsername
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 02:07 am
that's all communistic/partisan/leftist/Alien/Boston Red Sox/ truck drivers syndicate/Frank Sinatra/college students propaganda - in Fallujah in last month only three people were killed and it was in car accident, and yesterday it was soccer game between US soldiers and Iraqi's in which around 20,000 spectators cheerfully supported US team, and leaved very disappointed when Iraqi team won 2-1.
Now, I am not saying that there are no incidents, for example on Saturday some Iraqis were burning iraqi flags, so upset that some of their compatriots (last survey says that 7 of them - not 7%, only 7) don't like US occupation of their country
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greenumbrella
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 07:44 am
MyOwnUserName:

From USA Today. Not exactly a left-wing, pink rag.

Fallujah death toll for week more than 600
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MyOwnUsername
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 11:06 am
green, you cannot possibly think that I was serious? Smile
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greenumbrella
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 11:22 am
One can only hope not. Laughing
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Deecups36
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 12:35 pm
What a sad and depressing article. No wonder the Americans are hated more today in Iraq than Saddam was in his day.
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McGentrix
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 01:59 pm
Only by some Deecups, only by some.
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Brand X
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 02:06 pm
The north part of Fallujah is getting bombed now, the fake cease fire is really over.
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Deecups36
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 03:40 pm
Yes, the bombing is underway. When the smoke clears, Fallujahans can begin burying their dead, and thanking Americans for their chore. Wives can begin lives alone to raise their children and children can begin lives without fathers. An elderly man can say farwell to a wife of 50 years killed in the assault. So much to thank the USA for, so very much.
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hobitbob
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 03:42 pm
Remember...in the rightard dictionary "dead" is just another word for "liberated."
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Deecups36
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 03:52 pm
I fully expect to see some neocon wannabe post tomorrow how they read on a rightwing website that the Fallujahans are throwing flower petals on the feet of US Marines and toasting them for killing their kin.
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McGentrix
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Apr, 2004 07:31 pm
You're still blaming the wrong people in this.
0 Replies
 
John Webb
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Apr, 2004 02:26 am
I blame Adolph Hitler ..... because he taught Bush, Rumsfeld and Chaney everything they know. Twisted Evil
0 Replies
 
MyOwnUsername
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Apr, 2004 03:44 am
John Webb wrote:
I blame Adolph Hitler ..... because he taught Bush, Rumsfeld and Chaney everything they know. Twisted Evil


Most chilling are these two quotes:

"I believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator," said Adolf Hitler.

"God told me to strike at Al Qa'ida and I struck them. And then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did. With the might of God on our side we will triumph," said George Bush. Or was that Hitler talking to Bush?"


The article in News From Babylon "Hitler's Ghost - Nazi Influence in America" carefully examines the influence of this awful tyrant's regime on this current GOP awful tyrant's regime.

The article describes how Hitler's tactics and philosophies are in the offices of Senator Trent Lott and on the House side in the offices of Representative Tom Delay, an avowed Christian Zionist, who advocates the ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians by Israel and is a proponent of the Security Fence, while at the same time admonishing those who will listen to him to "stand unashamedly for Jesus Christ".

In the Pentagon, Hitler's ideology, has a friend in the form of US Marine Corps Lieutenant General William Boykin who believes that "God supports the US military because we're a Christian nation, because our foundation and our roots are Judeo-Christian.

That's what the Aryan Nation says too. They proclaim that they have God's support. Like all God-fearing Nazi's, they hope "To ordain, establish, and pledge our fidelity to our Aryan Racial Nation, under the Law of God, the uniting of our individual strength as a united lawful power, for the preservation and total independence from all alien influence and control over our Faith, Children, and Destiny. "
0 Replies
 
pistoff
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Apr, 2004 04:39 am
Excuse
Those young boys that burned the bodies of those mercs and hung them up did the US a favor. They provided the excuse that the US wanted to go level the city and kill as many insurgents as possible and teach the rest of the Iraqis a lesson.

This action may backfire on the US.
0 Replies
 
 

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