- BAQOUBA - Iraqi police say
they are underpaid, poorly armed and lack equipment to protect themselves
from increasing attacks by insurgents. Frequently branded as collaborators
with the US occupation, many Iraqi police resent the Americans and some
even express sympathy for the guerrillas.
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- The recent surge in attacks on Iraqi police followed
a decision by the US command to aggressively pursue insurgents before they
can strike. Nine police were among the 12 Iraqis killed in car bombings
last weekend at police stations in Baqouba and nearby Khan Bani Saad. Two
senior police commanders were killed last weekend in Mosul and a town south
of Baghdad.
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- American officials expect attacks to increase against
Iraqis working with their troops as the US-led administration begins handing
power to local leaders. Cultural clashes between Iraqi and American forces
only exacerbate a climate of bitterness and distrust.
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- About a dozen Iraqi policemen who spoke to reporters
on Wednesday said they were not deterred by the bombings and would continue
working for the police force.
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- Still, they expressed resentment toward the Americans,
who are better armed and less vulnerable to attack. Several policemen referred
to the resistance against the Americans as a jihad, or holy war, and said
Iraqis had a legitimate right to fight occupation.
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- "Take a look at the American bases," said Lieutenant
Miqdad Thamer, 25, in Baqouba. "They are hiding behind barricades
while we are here in the streets with not even guns to protect ourselves.
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- "We are getting attacked because they think we co-operate
with the Americans. This is not true. We are trying to bring security to
the city."
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- "They Must Leave And Hand Over"
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- Traffic officer Salman Khaizaran said attacks will continue
_ against Americans as well as Iraqis - as long as US troops remain. "If
they want the attacks to stop, they must leave the cities and hand over
security responsibilities to us."
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- A reporter in the city of Fallujah spoke with a police
captain in the US-appointed mayor's office, who said his force was helping
with security even though it did not endorse the US-led occupation. The
captain said everyone involved with the resistance "is a proud Iraqi
fighting for his nation".
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- Outside the bombed-out police station in Khan Bani Saad,
a group of police said they would not notify the Americans if they knew
of an imminent attack against the coalition or identify an attacker _ a
sentiment also expressed by police in Baqouba and Samarra.
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- "We would stop it if we know it will be carried
out in the city, because we don't want the Iraqi people to get hurt,"
said Salman, an officer who refused to give his last name. But he would
not report or stop an attack elsewhere, he said.
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- "I Wouldn't Tell On A Muslim"
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- "We are not spies," said his colleague.
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- "I wouldn't tell," said another policemen.
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- "I wouldn't tell on a Muslim," Salman added.
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- Chief US administrator Paul Bremer has praised the dedication
of the Iraqi police who remain on the job despite the growing threat of
guerrilla attack.
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- Yet many police said they are uncomfortable with some
of their duties, particularly going on raids with US soldiers. Lieutenant
Thamer, of Baqouba, said he and his men resent the way Americans burst
into homes and turn over furniture, bullying innocent occupants and searching
and pushing around women.
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- He described one raid that found a man in his underwear.
When an Iraqi policeman fetched the man's trousers, a US soldier told him
not to interfere and to "go away".
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- "Why make him walk into the street dressed like
that and humiliate him?" asked Thamer, who added that when he goes
on raids, he tries to show fellow Iraqis that he is not happy about it.
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- "I Cannot Make The Americans Understand"
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- "I feel anger. Because I cannot make the Americans
understand that this is the sanctity of the home, and I cannot justify
the Americans' action to the people. I am in a very difficult situation
and suffer tremendously because of that."
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- At the same time, Iraqi police complained that Americans
did not include them in planning the raids, withholding information on
which houses would be targeted until the last minute.
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- "They don't trust anyone who doesn't want to be
like them," said Lieutenant Abbas Adnan, 24, in Baqouba.
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- Even worse than feeling the Americans do not trust or
respect them, some police said, is being branded as traitors and collaborators
by other Iraqis.
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- Part of the reason is that people "see Americans
coming into our building, talking to us and they see us on patrols with
them," said policeman Odai Hanoon, 21, in Khan Bani Saad.
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- Thamer said some of his relatives severed relations with
him, and even his parents are not happy with his job.
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- "I Love My Job"
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- "I am doing this for my country," said the
lieutenant, who said he could not imagine quitting. "It's difficult
to give up something that you worked so hard for. I love being a policeman."
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- He also continues to work for the money, he said, treasuring
a good job in a country where most people are unemployed or underpaid.
A police officer gets $150 a month, while an ordinary cop gets $100.
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- Other police complained that their salaries were too
low for the job they were expected to do. They said they were not given
winter uniforms, having to wear their summer ones even though temperatures
have dropped. They complained about lack of proper weapons and about obsolete
equipment, including cars.
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- Happier Under Saddam
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- Several police said they were much happier under Saddam
Hussein.
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- The only officer who spoke positively about the Americans
was 1st Lieutenant Fadhel Faraj, 29, in charge of the Khan Bani Saad police
station.
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- "We don't co-operate with the Americans as occupiers
but as people who are helping us. They are building our country,"
he said, standing by a crater left by the car bombing.
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- Besides, he added: "The same people who are attacking
the Americans are attacking us."
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- http://www.news24.com/News24/World/Iraq/0,6119,2-10-1460_1451471,00.html
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