Iraq: The calm before the storm?
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An Iraqi policeman stands with a machine gun at a checkpoint near Baquba. REUTERS\Bob Strong
The British forces have finally handed over control to the locals in Iraq's Basra and some British papers are cautiously optimistic. But their legacy after four and a half years in this southern province is less than impressive to the new police commander, Jalil Khalaf. "They left me militia, they left me gangsters, and they left me all the troubles in the world," Khalif complains in a film by Britain's Guardian Films and ITV News, which can be viewed on the Observer website. While British foreign minister David Miliband admits that Basra is not "a land of milk and honey", he still insists it was the right time for the handover. Meanwhile, Khalaf lists some of problems the province is now facing. One of them is getting the control back from the Shia militia, unintentionally armed and trained by the British, who apparently didn't realise the recruits could be loyal to their parties and groups, rather than the state authorities. Another is the increasing number of women being killed for being 'immoral'. And this problem is not confined to Basra, according to the report by Guardian's Mark Lattimer. Bush's promise in 2004 to end "the systematic use of rape by Saddam's former regime to dishonour families" has come to nothing. The irony is that the situation is now much worse than in Saddam's era, when Iraqi women were considered the most liberated in the Middle East, says Lattimer. Nowadays, most women in Iraq only move around with a male escort. Rape is commonly committed by all armed groups, even those with connections to the government, and women are being killed in increasing numbers. "It is getting worse, especially the burnings (of women)," Lattimer quotes Khanim Rahim Latif, the manager of Asuda, an Iraqi organisation that works to combat violence against women, as saying. Khanim cites the case of a man who accused his sister of adultery: "When we asked him why he wanted to kill his sister, he said, 'Because it is now a democracy in Iraq'. He thought that democracy meant he could do whatever he wanted." Nevertheless, recently the country has seen less violence, with the lowest numbers of military and civilian deaths and attacks on foreign troops recorded for some time. It's not just Baghdad. Germany's Der Spiegel gives an account of an improved situation in Rawah, the town in the Anbar province, while Britain's Economist reports on the previously "most dangerous and xenophobic city in Iraq" - Falluja and its "tentative peace". James Forsyth in Britain's Guardian criticises the British press for not carrying enough coverage of these, as well as more negative developments in Iraq, but the U.S. at least has done a somewhat better job, he says. Stories of Baghdad's small businesses, which have until now profited from the high death tolls, switching to more pleasant sources of income make encouraging reading. Ibrahim Khalaf Abbas, who had been furniture and equipment for mourning ceremonies, is now catering for wedding parties, writes LA Times. Washington Post reports on security improvements in Baghdad area, which are probably due to the city's separation into Sunni and Shia neighbourhoods. This has prompted the Iraqi government to invite Iraqi refugees in Syria back home, with some dubious results. Some of them heeded the call, only to find their homes looted, destroyed or other occupants living there. "It's very easy to say, 'Come home.' But come home where, and how? It's much more complex than that," says Guy Siri, U.N. deputy humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, in the article. The reason for returning may be improved security, but the government is mainly doing it to show it's "doing something" and to look good, according to Herve Richard-Thomas from the U.S. relief agency International Medical Corps. Omar Qasim is one of the Iraqi refugees in Syria who decided to stay put for now. He wants to go back to his country one day but, as he tells the Post, "the current calm in Baghdad is the calm before the storm."
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02 Jan 2008 17:03:11 GMT
I watched the film interview of Major General Jalil Khalaf from the above link Dec.19/07. His clarity, coherence, courage, compassion, and sense of universality left me in awe, and temporarily speechless. I returned today to reread the articles and watch his interview again and because I felt compelled to comment. To do otherwise seemed like abandonment on my part also.
It is hoped the British Foreign Secretary David Miliband and Major General Graham also viewed it. I do not think they know what the word 'friend' means. Their comments are in stark contrast to those of Major General Khalaf's. The latter is obviously moved into action by the shocking brutality towards women. He reads their deaths as a sign of the breakdown of law and asks rightly so where are the defenders of human rights, the feminists, spiritual and political leaders? In my opinion, the storm already broke for women 3000 years ago when the 3 desert religions began to portray and define women and their children as less than man. Today: Their protection is a worthy cause for the British to stay in Basra; re-engineer their security master plan; and to follow/support Major General Khalaf's stand and lead. To leave him and the women is to collude with the latterâs terrorists and reinforce this terrorism in general world wide. For it sends on the old message, a subtext that women are still basically viewed as valueless no matter which side they are situated in, exist on the outer rim of Democracy, and we of the western states with all our might and power are basically hypocrites. Thank you to all who made this sad, alarming information available and for this interview with an enlightened, courageous individual possible. I earnestly hope it changes minds and thus, saves lives. Thank you for considering my opinion.