[Mb-civic] Robert Fisk: Beyond the Coalition's concrete walls

ean at sbcglobal.net ean at sbcglobal.net
Thu Aug 25 15:30:47 PDT 2005


The Independent - Aug 21, 2005
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article307318.ece

Beyond the Coalition's concrete walls

There are now two Baghdads. One is the Green Zone, where US and Iraqi
officials live in a protected realm; the other is the danger zone, where
everyone else lives.

by Robert Fisk

On Monday, George Bush was praising the greedy sectarian politicians here
- who had totally failed to meet the new Iraqi constitution deadline - for
their "heroic" efforts for "democracy". At about the same time, I came
across a friend at one of Baghdad's best-known hotels. He is the deputy
manager and I've known him for more than three years, but he now looked
twice his age. He grasped my arm and looked into my face. "Mr Robert," he
said, "do you realise I was kidnapped?" Every day now, I come across Iraqi
acquaintances - or friends who have cousins or fathers or sons - who have
been kidnapped. Often they are released. Sometimes they are murdered and I
go to their families to express those condolences which are especially
painful for me - because I am a Westerner, arriving to say how sorry I am
to relatives who blame the West for the anarchy that killed their loved
ones.

This time my friend survived, just.

Another good friend, a university professor, visits me for coffee the next
day. The absence of identities in this report tells you all you need to
know about the terror which embraces Baghdad. "I was invigilating the last
exams of term in the linguistics department and I saw a mature student
cheating. I walked up to him and said I believed he was cribbing. He said
he wasn't. I told him I would take his papers away and he leant towards me
and made it clear I would be murdered if I prevented him completing his
exams. I went to the head of department. I thought he would discipline
this man and take away his papers. But he talked to him and then said that
he could continue the exam. My own head of department failed me
completely." My professor friend loves English literature, but he has new
problems.

"Many of the students are now very Islamically oriented. They want their
classes taught through the prism of their religion. But what can I do? I
can't teach existentialism any more because it would be seen as
anti-Islamic - which means no more Sartre. These same people ask me for
the religious message in Eugene O'Neill's plays. What can I say? I can't
teach any more. Do you understand this? I can't teach." Since Baghdad's "
liberation" in April 2003, 180 professors and schoolteachers have been
assassinated in Iraq, and shortly after my professor's visit, I receive a
call from one of his colleagues.

"They kidnapped old Amin Yassin and his son two days ago. We don't know
where they are." Amin Yassin was not, like some of his colleagues, an
ex-Baathist. He was a retired linguist who taught grammar in the English
department of Baghdad University. His 30-year-old son is a secondary
school teacher. The two were seized in the Khavraha neighbourhood, seven
miles westof Baghdad.

On Thursday, in the an-Nahda bus station, two bombs tear 43 people to
pieces - almost all of them Shia Muslims - and at the al-Kindi hospital,
which also receives a bomb close by, relatives of the missing are
screaming as they try to identify the dead. The problem is that the
morticians can't fit the limbs to the right bodies and, in some cases, the
right heads to the right torsos.

I head off to the Palestine Hotel where one of the largest Western news
agencies has its headquarters. I take the lift to an upper floor only to
be met by a guard and a vast steel wall which blocks off the hotel
corridor. He searches me, sends in my card and after a few minutes an
Iraqi guard stares at me through a grille and opens an iron door.

I enter to find another vast steel wall in front of me. Once he has 
clanged the outer door shut, the inner door is opened and I am in the
grotty old hotel corridor.

The reporters are sitting in a fuggy room with a small window from which
they can see the Tigris river. One of the American staff admits he has not
been outside "for months". An Arab reporter does their street reporting;
an American travels around Iraq - but only as an "embed" with US troops.
No American journalists from this bureau travel the streets of Baghdad.
This is not hotel journalism, as I once described it. This is prison
journalism.

One of the Americans, an old and brave friend of mine from Beirut days,
walks over. "Have a look at this, Fisky," he says. "This is the kind of
crap we get from the Americans these days - this is what they want us to
write about." It is a news release from the Coalition press office, the
spin doctors of the occupation troops here. "Comics Bring Barrels of
Laughs to Task Force Baghdad," it says.

I drive back across Baghdad. There is a massive traffic jam because the
Iraqi National Guard - the American-trained Iraqis who are supposed to
save Donald Rumsfeld's career and let the US forces reduce their troop
strength here - have mounted a checkpoint. Most of them are so frightened
that they are wearing ski-masks over their mouths. Like every Iraqi I
meet, I do not trust the Iraqi National Guard. They have been infiltrated
by both Sunni and Shia insurgents and now have a nasty propensity to carry
out house raids on Sunni areas, to arrest the menfolk and then to steal as
much money as they can find in the house. "First they arrest my son and
then they take all my jewellery," a woman complained on an Arabic
satellite channel that was investigating this venal militia.

I go home and switch on my television to find the BBC reporting on an "
elite" force of Iraqi troops who are receiving anti-terrorism training in
Britain. And there they are, foliage attached to their helmets, leaping
over hedges and cooling streams. In the Welsh mountains.

Friday night. In the heart of this vast and oven-like city stands the
Green Zone, 10 square kilometres of barricaded, walled, sealed-off
palaces, villas and gardens - once the Raj-like centre of Saddam's regime
wherein now dwell the Iraqi government, the constitutional committee, the
US embassy, the British embassy and many hundreds of Western mercenaries.
Many of them never meet Iraqis. Women in shorts jog past the rose beds;
armed men and women " contractors" lie by the pool. There were at least
three restaurants - until one of them was blown up by suicide bombers. You
can buy phone accessories in a local shop, newspapers, pornographic DVDs.
For tactical reasons, the Americans were forced to include dozens of
middle-class Iraqi homes inside the Green Zone, a decision that has
outraged many of the householders. They often have to wait four hours to
pass through the security checkpoints.

Irony of ironies, the tomb of Michel Aflaq, founder of the Baath party
that once included both Iraq and Syria, lies inside the Green Zone.

On Friday night, this crusader castle was bathed in its usual 
floodlights. I was looking up at the stars over the city when there was a
dull sound and a flash of light from within the Green Zone. Somewhere not
far from me, someone had launched a mortar at the illuminated fishbowl
that has become the symbol of occupation for all Iraqis. Many ask what
will become of it when the whole Western edifice here collapses. Some say
it will become insurgent headquarters, others the next parliament. My
guess is that whoever runs Iraq once the occupation collapses will turn
the whole thing into a theme park. Or maybe just a museum.

 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.



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