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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Fallujah residents return to a destroyed city
By Joseph Kay
30 December 2004
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On December 23, US forces in Iraq began allowing a handful
of residents of Fallujah to return to their devastated homes.
Reports from these residents have provided a glimpse of the destruction
inflicted upon Fallujah by the American military since an offensive
against the city began early in November.
Fallujah is home to 250,000 to 300,000 Iraqis. Most of the
citys occupants fled before the invasion last month, many
taking up temporary shelter at squalid and cramped refugee camps
outside Baghdad. For a month and a half, these residents have
been prevented from returning, as US troops carry out ongoing
operations against remaining resistance fighters in some neighborhoods.
According to a US military spokesman, about 8,000 have been
allowed to reenter the city during the past week, all of whom
had homes in the neighborhood of al-Andalus, which is described
as one of the less-devastated regions. Conditions in the rest
of the city therefore are likely to be just as bad as the descriptions
provided by these returning Iraqis, if not worse.
While the US media made much of the supposed victory of US
forces in Fallujah last month, the tales of its residentswhich
make a mockery of American claims to be fighting for freedom and
democracyhave been virtually ignored in the press.
The Integrated Regional Information Networks (IRIN), a humanitarian
information unit of the United Nations, interviewed a number of
those who have returned to Fallujah. IRIN states that despite
some reports to the contrary, most of those who returned found
their homes destroyed, with the remainder finding extensive damage
inside their homes. Windows, television sets and other household
items had been shattered by bullets.
Fadhe Kubaissey told IRIN, Fallujah is nothing but destruction
and empty areas. Its a new desert inside Iraq. Those who
have returned to their homes in the past few days lack the minimum
conditionsthe city is uninhabitable.
Abbas Jumaili, another Fallujah resident and father of five,
said, We are three brothers and all of us have lost our
homes. I really dont know how we will start our life again
inside this city.... This city cannot offer a minimum of living
conditions for a year. Its a complete disaster.
Dr. Saleh Hussein Iswawi of the Fallujah General Hospital told
the British Broadcasting Corporation, About 60 percent to
70 percent of the homes and buildings are completely crushed and
damaged, and not ready to inhabit at the moment. Of the 30 percent
still left standing, I dont think there is a single one
that has not been exposed to some damage. He reported ongoing
fighting. I was in Fallujah hospital last night [December
23] and I heard a lot of fighting and bombing, which continued
for about three or four hours. I heard very loud explosions inside
the city.
Another resident, Ali Mahmood, told Reuters: I saw the
city and al-Andalus destroyed. My house is completely destroyed.
There is nothing left for me to stay for. Yasser Satar said:
What do they want from Fallujah? This is the crime of the
century. Is this freedom and democracy that they brought to Fallujah?
Included in the destruction are not only civilian homes, but
the basic facilities necessary for providing minimal public services.
The American military has apparently deliberately targeted any
structures relied upon by ordinary citizens. The two main hospitals,
including Fallujah General Hospital, are no longer operable. The
general hospital was one of the first targets of the invasion
in November because the US military wanted to cut off any reports
of civilian casualties.
According to IRIN, In the city as a whole, the two main
library buildings have been burned and schools and medical clinics
have been all but destroyed and are unable to function.
The US military also targeted electrical and water treatment facilities,
and sewage has flooded some areas. Most mosques have also been
destroyed or damaged.
Sheik Hareth Suliman Al-Dari told IslamOnline that Fallujah
has become uninhabitable with no water, electricity or wastewater
facilities. The rotten smell of the dead is widespread and smokes
of internationally banned weapons cover its sky. There have
been widespread reports that the US military has used chemical
weaponsincluding napalmagainst remaining Iraqi fighters
in the city.
In addition to destruction, returning residents have also encountered
death on a large scale. Al Jazeera reports that according
to one resident, Abd al-Rahman Slim, Charred and half-eaten
corpses littered the streets. Stray dogs are reported to
roam the streets, eating decaying bodies. Salim said that he entered
my neighbors house and found him, after identifying him
from an identity card. His body was lying on the ground, nothing
left of him but some bones. The scene was very shocking and I
could not stay as the smell in the houses and the street was intolerable.
It is impossible to say how many Iraqis have been killed in
Fallujah during the last month and a half. The Iraqi Red Crescent
gave one estimate of 6,000 dead. Much of the evidence is being
destroyed, as the US has reportedly been clearing the streets
of bodies and burying them in mass graves. Most of the city, moreover,
remains off limits to anyone but the US military.
Many of those who have returned have done so because of the
terrible conditions at the refugee camps where they have been
staying for the past month. These camps are cramped, with up to
ten people in tents designed to hold three. Food and medical supplies
are scarce. With the onset of winter, families are suffering from
the cold, without adequateor anyheating equipment.
Nevertheless, conditions are so bad in Fallujah that, according
to a US military spokesman, most of those who have returned have
not elected to stay.
Statements from residents have confirmed reports that the American
forces are preparing a police state for any residents that do
decide to remain in the city. Those who have returned have been
forced to pass through US checkpoints, where they are fingerprinted
and have their retinas scanned for identity purposes. Anyone staying
must obtain a photo ID from the US military, which must be displayed
on his or her person at all times. There is also a strict curfew.
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Fallujah resident Abd Allah
Mahmud al-Issawi said, The instructions [from the Americans]
stipulated that no car can move inside the city. No child or elderly
can cross the street and they [the US troops] are not responsible
for anyones security, meaning that residents will live in
a cage inside the town.
US forces have not yet begun implementing plans for work gangs,
overseen by the US military. Previous reports indicated that all
Iraqi males able to work would be pressed into these units.
The reality in Fallujah is the face of the US occupation. The
destruction of the city, which is a war crime on a massive scale,
is meant as an example. It is an indication of what the American
military is prepared to inflict on any region offering resistance
to the US presence in Iraq.
See Also:
Documents reveal systematic torture by
US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan
[24 December 2004]
Iraq aflame over mass killings
in Fallujah
[13 November 2004]
US assault leaves Fallujah
in ruins and unknown numbers dead
[11 November 2004]
US massacres civilians in
Fallujah
[10 November 2004]
US media and liberal establishment:
accomplices in the assault on Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
US troops begin slaughter
in Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
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