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Analysis : Middle
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American troops shoot down two Iraqi protesters
By Mike Head
20 June 2003
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In an incident that will further fuel popular hostility to
the American occupation of Iraq, US troops killed at least two
men in Baghdad on Wednesday when they opened fire on a protest
outside the US administrations headquarters.
About 500 demonstrators confronted a line of 40 troops armed
with bayonet-mounted assault rifles standing behind razor-edged
concertina wire. Chanting slogans and waving banners, they were
mostly ex-soldiers opposing the American chief administrator Paul
Bremers disbandment of the 400,000-member Iraqi regular
army, leaving them and their families destitute. They were also
demanding payment of salaries still unpaid more than three weeks
after Bremers May 23 decision.
Angry demonstrations have taken place virtually every day outside
the arched gate leading to the compound of Saddams former
Republican Palace, now housing US offices. On May 26, up to 5,000
former military personnel staged a demonstration. But observers
said the protests, which have also seen civil servants demanding
new jobs or back wages, have been largely peaceful.
Nevertheless, the US Central Command immediately defended the
killings, accusing protesters of tossing rocks at a military convoy
as it tried to pass through. One demonstrator pulled out
a weapon and began shooting, said a statement from Central
Command hours after the incident. US forces responded, killing
two of the demonstrators.
This account is at odds with eyewitness reports. According
to Associated Press, Samir Mizban, one of its photographers, said
a civilian driver fired a pistol into the air after crowds began
smashing his car. Mizban said the protesters were stoning every
vehicle within range.
It was a new car. The demonstrators broke the windscreen
with wooden sticks. The driver tried to escape, so he fired in
the air with his pistol, Mizban said. After the driver fired
his gun, the enraged crowd threw rocks at the American soldiers
blocking the palace gate and at journalists, who fled. US troops
then opened fire, Mizban said.
The killings are indicative of US officials and soldiers responding
indiscriminately with a mixture of fear and brute repression against
an increasingly outraged and vocal population. Reporting for the
Independent, Patrick Cockburn commented: The shooting
of the demonstrators appears to be part of a pattern under which
the US army responds to any dissent.
Many demonstrators who spoke to reporters were old and only
nominally part of Saddam Husseins armed forces, but were
refused retirement by the previous regime. Others said that during
the war, US planes had dropped leaflets promising them fair treatment
if they did not fight. They bitterly condemned the American occupation.
Ryad Abdul Wahab, whose right arm is now only a stump, said:
I was wounded ... in the fighting at the airport during
the war and now I can get no pension. How can I survive?
Others said they had nothing to live on and were being punished,
though they had refused to fight for Saddam Hussein.
We did not fight for Saddam but we will fight for our
children, said Major Kassim Ali, formerly an artillery officer.
He said they wanted back pay, pensions and the re-establishment
of the army. He added: If a country has no army it cannot
be independent.
The shootings seem certain to provoke reprisals. Some demonstrators
threatened suicide attacks on American soldiers. A former sergeant
predicted violence against Americans would increase. We
have weapons including RPGs (rocket propelled grenades),
he said. We may use them if our demands are not met.
Just hours after the killings, gunmen in a car fatally shot
a US soldier and wounded another as they guarded a propane gas
distribution point, amid signs of growing resistance to the US
occupation. It was the second American fatality in Baghdad and
the fourth across Iraq this week, bringing to 188 the number of
soldiers killed in Iraq since the invasion began on March 20.
The mood in the capital has become increasingly hostile this
week as US troops intensified sweeps and searches across the city
and the country in the name of hunting down weapons and Baath
Party supporters. Before dawn on Wednesday, troops sealed several
streets of the Karrada neighborhood and ordered residents from
their beds to stand in the street as they searched their homes.
One man was taken away with his hands bound behind his back.
The military said about 400 people had been arrested since
the latest operation, dubbed Desert Scorpion, began on Sunday.
There were reports of prisoners being taken away blindfolded.
They (the Americans) are worse than Saddam, Khalid
Ibrahim, a 50-year-old driver, told the Guardian. He was
among two dozen people arrested and interrogated outside a mosque
in Baghdad last weekend and released after five hours.
Apart from the increasingly heavy-handed methods of repression,
the resentment is also being fuelled by the American destruction
of Iraqs social and economic infrastructure. Over the past
10 days, electricity shortages have meant that during the extreme
heat of the Iraqi summer most people have no air conditioning
or refrigerators to prevent food rotting.
Excessive force used in Fallujah
The US Central Command version of Wednesdays events is
another crude attempt to cover up the killing of demonstrators.
Just a day earlier, Human Rights Watch released a report saying
troops used excessive force in Fallujah when they shot and killed
20 protesters and wounded nearly 90 on April 28 and April 30.
Since the killings, Fallujah, a city of 300,000 about 60 kilometres
west of Baghdad, has become a centre of resistance to US rule.
Ambushes on American forces by unknown gunmen have left four American
soldiers dead and 21 wounded.
Human Rights Watch said its two investigators, who visited
and photographed the scene of the shootings and interviewed witnesses
and participants on both sides, found no evidence to support American
assertions that troops fired on gunmen in the crowd.
The researchers saw few bullet holes that would suggest that
the crowd of protesters fired on the soldiers using a school as
a base. But they discovered more than 100 bullet holes on seven
buildings across the street. The evidence, the report said, was
inconsistent with American statements that the soldiers responded
with precision fire when they were allegedly attacked.
The buildings across the street facing the school had
extensive evidence of multi-calibre bullet impacts that were wider
and more sustained than would have been caused by the 'precision
fire with which the soldiers maintain they responded, leading
to the civilian casualties that day, the report stated.
Witness testimony and ballistics evidence suggest that US
troops responded with excessive force to a perceived threat.
The report produced directly conflicting accounts of the first
shooting on April 28. Soldiers were quoted saying they fired for
30 seconds after seven men fired at them, five from the crowd
and two on roofs across the street. A statement issued by US Central
Command the day after that shooting said approximately 25
armed civilians fired on the soldiers.
But witnesses told Human Rights Watch that the soldiers fired
for 10 minutes and shot those who came to the aid of wounded people.
Protesters also said that American soldiers prevented ambulances
that were clearly marked from entering the area. Seventeen people
were killed and more than 70 were wounded in the incident, Iraqi
witnesses said.
In a second shooting on April 30, soldiers from another unit
in the 82nd Airborne said they returned fire after being shot
at while moving through Fallujah in a convoy. Protesters said
they threw rocks at the Americans but never fired. According to
them, three Iraqis were killed and at least 16 were wounded.
Human Rights Watch called for a full, independent and impartial
investigation, with access to classified evidence, such as communications
between US commanders, to determine whether members of the US
82nd Airborne Division or higher US authorities violated international
humanitarian law.
Regardless of the possible responsibility of the individuals
involved in the shooting that led to the killing of up to twenty
and wounding of scores of others, one conclusion is inescapable.
US military and political authorities who placed combat-ready
soldiers in the highly volatile environment of al-Fallujah without
adequate law enforcement training, translators, and crowd control
devices followed a recipe for disaster...
Under international humanitarian law, the United States,
as the occupying power in Iraq, has the obligation to restore
and ensure public order and safety, in conformity with international
human rights standards.
The report confirms that, at the very least, the Bush administration
and the Pentagon have ordered war-weary, tense and heavily-armed
troops to suppress all signs of the mounting opposition to American
rule.
While a full investigation is absolutely necessary, it is clear
that such shootings are not an aberration. They result directly
from the colonial-style US takeover of Iraq, which is increasingly
taking the form of a war against the entire population.
See Also:
Washingtons war of terror in Iraq
[18 June 2003]
US launches major military offensive
in liberated Iraq
[13 June 2003]
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