- Channel Four News in Britain recently broadcast a short
film report from inside Fallujah, showing the massive devastation wreaked
on the city in last November's US-led assault.
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- The assault by US forces on the Iraqi city of Fallujah
was one of the greatest war crimes since the Second World War. Over the
course of nine days, Operation Phantom Fury, involving 10,000 US troops
backed by 500 British soldiers, reduced the city, once famed for its 120
mosques and modern infrastructure, to ruins.
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- In the two months that have passed, little or nothing
has been reported of the fate of Fallujah and its residents. In part, this
is because the US military placed a cordon around the city and closely
controls all movement in or out. But the silence is as much a result of
the dishonest and servile attitude of the media.
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- There are, however, a few rare exceptions. One such was
broadcast on British television January 11. In a special report for Channel
4 News, produced by Guardian Films, Dr. Ali Fadhil travelled to the Fallujah
area to find out what had become of the city in the aftermath of the US
military assault.
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- Initially, Dr. Fadhil, a hospital doctor turned journalist
from Baghdad, is unable to get inside the city, so he begins by looking
for Fallujans in the surrounding villages and refugee camps, where most
of the former city inhabitants now live. He travels first to Habbaniyah,
a town 35 kilometres west of Fallujah. In the main street of this former
tourist resort, he witnesses a pitiful scene as people huddle around makeshift
fires, trying to keep warm in freezing temperatures. The people at the
refugee camp have received no food aid for three months.
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- Abu Rabe'e, who has lived in a camp in Habbaniyah for
the past two months, tells Fadhil, "We're meant to be the country
of oil, aren't we? But look at me: I'm measuring the kerosene for this
lamp by the drop. We've no heat here-we're using wood for the fire."
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- Asked about the election planned for January 30, Rabe'e
replies, "We won't vote! We just won't vote! They must take us back
to our houses first." This is the general response to the planned
elections. The authorities have not distributed ballot papers to any former
residents of Fallujah. Hameed Allawy, another refugee, tells Fadhil he
has not received any ballot papers, "and I don't want them, anyway.
None of the Fallujans here have got their voting coupons."
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- In Saqlawyah, a village just north of Fallujah, at Friday
prayers, the talk is all about the elections. A priest asks, "Why
isn't the government giving people here their vote?" Sheikh Jamal
al-Mihimdi attracts large numbers of Fallujan refugees to listen to his
sermons. He is shown giving an emotional address to the congregation about
the US military assault: "And I saw with my own eyes the holy Koran
thrown to the floor of the mosque by those sons of pigs and monkeys. The
Americans were treading on the holy Koran, and it broke my heart."
At this point, he breaks down in tears.
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- Sheikh Jamal, who had been asked by the US military to
remove bodies from Fallujah, describes what he found: "The Americans
had marked the houses with dead bodies with a cross. That's where we found
the martyrs. In my opinion, these people were civilians, not terrorists.
They were men who had stayed behind in the city to protect their homes.
I say this because we found the bodies in groups of two or three or four;
it was Ramadan and people would naturally gather together for Iftar, the
first meal after fasting.
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- "We found the bodies right behind their front doors.
It looked to me as if they had opened their doors to the Americans and
been immediately shot dead. That's how we found them."
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- The sheikh takes Fadhil to a cemetery on the edge of
the city and shows him where he has buried the dead. The gravestones have
no names, only numbers. Sheikh Jamal says that none of them had carried
weapons and that he had found an old man of 90 who had been shot dead as
he stood in his kitchen.
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- To get into Fallujah, it is necessary to apply for a
special Identity Card from the American military. Most returning Fallujans
find this a deeply humiliating experience; being fingerprinted by an American
soldier just in order to go home is acutely embarrassing.
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- The film shows a line of men queuing for the card, their
faces covered to save public embarrassment. One man says, "This is
just another humiliation for the people of Fallujah. I think they are doing
it on purpose to humiliate us."
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- The first thing Fadhil and his cameraman notice on the
road into Fallujah is the graffiti; typical is "Long live the mujahideen."
But Fadhil is unprepared for the sheer scale of the devastation of the
city itself. "I couldn't believe it, the whole city is destroyed.
It was a big shock. I wasn't prepared for this much destruction. I was
here just before the American attack. It's hard to believe this is the
same city; it's incredible, destruction everywhere. Fallujah used to be
one of the few modern Iraqi cities, and now there is nothing."
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- In the ruined landscape of rubble and general carnage,
Fadhil hears from survivors how innocent civilians have been killed during
the military onslaught, unarmed residents shot in their beds. Rabid dogs
feed on corpses in the street. In a city formerly home to almost a third
of a million people, there is now virtually no water, electricity or working
sewage system; most of its inhabitants are homeless and destitute. For
many of the people, all that is left of their homes is a pile of rubble-in
many parts of the city the terrain has been altered beyond recognition.
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- The film shows a man frantically rummaging through a
heap of bricks littered with mostly broken household objects. The debris
is all that remains of Abu Salah's home. He beckons to the camera, "Look
at these mattresses here! These were for my son's wedding. This was my
son's room. And, look, here! This was our kitchen.... This is the sugar
bag that we left in the kitchen right here." Again, the looming elections,
mentioned only in anger: "If [US puppet Iraqi President] Allawi wants
us to vote in the elections, then let him come here first and look at the
state we're living in."
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- As Fadhil moves through the city, he comes across increasing
instances of the slaughter. At one point, he says he can smell the bodies
beneath the rubble.
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- He is taken to the old city of Fallujah, where the four
American contractors were killed last March. "The Americans don't
allow any one to go here: they say it's not safe. It is a scary place,
but these Fallujan people insist on taking me somewhere. They want to show
me something really gruesome." In the front room of a deserted house
are four rotting dead bodies lying on the floor, shot as they slept. There
are no signs of a gun battle and no bullet holes. "I could not see
any weapons. There are no obvious signs that they were insurgents.... I
am told they were civilians."
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- Nahida Kham was among the first Fallujans to go back
since US troops occupied the city. She motions for Fadhil to come see what
has become of her home, "Look at it! Furniture, clothes thrown everywhere!
They smashed up the cupboards, and they wrote something bad on the dressing-table
mirror." As Nahida speaks no English, Fadhil has to explain to her
that scrawled on mirror are the words, "F**k Iraq and every Iraqi
in it!"
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- When Fadhil goes to the main cemetery in Fallujah, they
are still burying the dead. Two months after the fighting started, there
was still no accounting of how many Fallujans died.
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- Fadhil describes the scene he saw upon entering the cemetery:
"As I went into the graveyard, the bodies of two young men were arriving.
The faces were rotting. The ambulance driver lifted the bones of one of
the hands; the skin had rotted away."
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- Fadhil counts 76 graves. "The Americans claim they
killed 1,200, so even if these people were insurgents, where are the other
graves?" he asks. Fadhil says he saw no evidence of the hundreds of
foreign fighters that the US had said were using Fallujah as their headquarters.
"People told me there were some Yemenis and Saudis, some volunteers
from Tunisia and Egypt, but most of the fighters were Fallujan. The US
military say they have hundreds of bodies frozen in a potato chip factory
5 kilometres south of the city, but nobody has been allowed to go there
in the past two months, including the Red Crescent."
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- The film shows Mr. and Mrs. Salman looking for their
18-year-old son Ahmed. Fadhil asks if they think they will find their son
here. Mr. Salman replies, "Yes, God willing." A man approaches
and tells them he believes their son is buried next to the remains of a
Tunisian fighter.
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- As she wails over the grave of her son, Mrs. Salman cries,
"Ahmed, my dear son, I told you not to go with those men. I told you
they were deceiving you, my darling." Mr. Salman looks nervous: "Shut
up, woman!" Mrs. Salman: "I blame Iyad Allawi for all this. I'd
like to cut his throat!"
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- For the two weeks Fadhil travels around the villages;
he tries to get in contact with one of the insurgent leaders, to find out
why there appear to be so few fighters' bodies. Fadhil finally makes contact
with Abu Shaiba, the commander of the "Army of Mohammad," based
in the al-Shuhada'a district in south Fallujah. With his face covered,
Shaiba relates what had happened to the insurgents under his command: "The
fighters withdrew from the town following an order from our senior leadership.
We pulled out, but not because we had lost the fight with the Americans.
It was a tactical decision to re-group."
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- Finally, Fadhil speculates on the results of the US military
offensive against the city. "If so many of the insurgents escaped,
what did the American forces really achieve in Fallujah? The violence has
simply spread to other parts of the country; over 300,000 people have lost
their homes and now bitterly resent the Americans. 'The City of Mosques'
has become the 'City of Rubble.'
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- "It is hard to see how this will strengthen Iraq's
new democracy. The elections are two weeks away-but most of the Fallujans
I met won't even be given the chance to vote."
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- As the film report from Fallujah makes clear, the future
envisioned for Iraq by US imperialism is not one of a flowering democracy,
but the terrorising and suppression of all resistance from an outraged
and rebellious population.
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- The film report and a transcript can be downloaded from
the Journeyman Pictures web site
- http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=18059#18048
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