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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US shuts down anti-occupation Iraqi newspaper
By James Conachy
30 March 2004
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Thousands of followers of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took
to the streets of Baghdad on Sunday to demonstrate against the
US shutdown of Al Hawza, a weekly journal published under
Sadrs editorial influence. A tense standoff ensued outside
the newspapers offices between nervous American troops and
crowds of angry Iraqis chanting Where is democracy now?
Earlier in the day, US troops sealed Al Hawzas
doors with chains, acting on the direct orders of Paul Bremer,
the head of the US-controlled Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA). The publication has been banned for 60 days. If it is published
in defiance of the US diktat, the editors and employees
could face up to one years imprisonment and a fine of $US1000.
The CPA has accused Al Hawza, which has a circulation
of about 50,000, of violating a US-imposed law which prohibits
newspapers from creating instability through inciting violence
against the coalition forces. It alleges two articles in
the February 26 edition of the newspaper incite violence.
The first was a column which speculated that the deaths of 53
Shiites in the town of Iskandariyah on February 10 were caused
by a missile fired by a US Apache helicopter, not a terrorist
car bomb as the US military alleged. The second was an article
headlined Bremer follows in the steps of Saddam, that
documented various ways in which the US occupation was trampling
on the democratic rights of the Iraqi people.
CPA spokesman Al Elsadr told the Washington Post: The
false information in that paper was hurting stability. It was
stirring up a lot of hate. It was making people think we were
out to get them. If people actually believed that coalition forces
were slaughtering civilians it could be real dangerous. Thats
incitement.
In fact, in accusing the US of replicating the methods of Saddam
Hussein, Al Hawza was simply reflecting the views and experiences
of many Iraqis. The Iraqi people have no rights under the occupation.
Hundreds of civilians have been gunned down during raids, at checkpoints
or during demonstrations. Thousands of men have been dragged from
their homes by US troops and flung into prison camps. The years
of economic sanctions and war have left the country in ruin, with
immense social problems that the US is making little attempt to
address.
The US authority is so sensitive to the potential for a social
explosion that it instinctively responds to criticism and opposition
with repression. Journalists, particularly those trying to report
objectively on the real state of affairs, work under extremely
difficult conditions. Thirteen journalists were killed in Iraq
last yearmost by American bullets. On two occasions, the
US has sought to hinder the operations of Arab television broadcasters
Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya, also accusing them of
inciting violence.
Referring to the shutdown of Sadrs newspaper, freelance
Iraqi journalist Omar Jassem told the Washington Post:
I guess this is the Bush edition of democracy.
The crackdown against Al Hawza has been ordered amidst
a rapidly growing crisis for the US. The bulk of the Shiite religious
leadership, including the leading cleric Ali al-Sistani, has now
rejected the interim constitution announced by the CPA on March
8. A petition campaign is underway at mosques to collect hundreds
of thousands of signatures demanding that the constitution be
rewritten to include a number of demands of the Shiite clergy.
The petition declares: It [the constitution] is illegal
because the administrators who have drafted the law lack legitimacy
among ordinary Iraqis.
Among the Shia clerics conducting this campaign, Sadr has been
the most vocal critic of the occupation. He has a substantial
following among the predominantly Shiite urban poor of Baghdad.
Only 31 years old, he has built support by demanding that the
American troops get out of Iraq immediately and condemning the
US for the collapse of the countrys infrastructure. The
estimated 10,000-strong Medhi militia loyal to him
has de-facto control over parts of the sprawling slums of eastern
Baghdad known as Sadr Cityafter his father Mohammed
Sadek al-Sadr, who was assassinated on Saddam Husseins orders
in 1999. Sadr also has a sizeable base in the main Shiite holy
city of Najaf, where he resides.
Last October, a tense situation developed in both Karbala and
Baghdad when the CPA sought to disarm Sadrs militiamen and
arrest one of his leading clerics. A number of militiamen and
several American troops were killed. At that time the US decided
against outlawing Sadr. This weeks closure of Al Hawza
may be the first step toward a direct US confrontation with Sadrs
organisation, with the aim of weakening the Shiite opposition
to the interim constitution. There is no doubt that the focus
of the next issue of the newspaper would have been denunciations
of the document and calls for Shiites to support the campaign
against it.
Sadr represents a layer of the ruling elite who are seeking
to channel the frustrations and grievances of the most impoverished
section of the population into reactionary calls for an Islamic
state. He views the US overthrow of Saddam Husseins secular
Baathist regime as having created the best possible conditions
for the Shiite clergy to come to power and establish a theocracy
over Iraq.
The US actions will only boost his credentials among the Iraqi
masses. Yesterday in Baghdad, angry but peaceful demonstrations
in support of Al Hawza continued. Sheikh Mahmud Sudani,
a spokesman for Sadr told AFP: We are determined to pursue
our protest until they reopen our paper. The papers
editor told the Washington Post: That chain you see
on the door is one of the American symbols of freedom. Do you
think this is political freedom?
See Also:
Iraqs illegitimate interim constitution
[13 March 2004]
US plans for a new Iraqi regime
in disarray
[26 January 2004]
Protests grow against US-led
occupation of Iraq
[15 January 2004]
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