- "The only difference is that Saddam would kill you
in private, where the Americans will kill you in public."
-
- BAGHDAD (Reuters) -- Joy
at the capture of Saddam Hussein gave way to resentment toward Washington
Monday as Iraqis confronted afresh the bloodshed, shortages and soaring
prices of life under U.S. occupation.
-
- The morning after Iraq's U.S. governor revealed the ousted
strongman was a disheveled prisoner, Iraqis flooded the streets to snatch
up newspapers emblazoned with photos of the man who ruled them by fear,
now humbled and captive.
-
- Many were ecstatic to see Saddam captured and hoped he
would answer for his deeds but said they would not rush to thank America
-- in their eyes the source of their problems since a U.S.-led coalition
toppled Saddam in April.
-
- "I hope that we get the chance to try him our way,
to let everyone who suffered make him taste what he had made us taste,"
said Ali Hussein, 29, a stationery shop owner who said he was still dizzy
with joy.
-
- "But whether he's in a hole or in jail, it does
nothing for me today, it won't feed me or protect me or send my children
to school," he said.
-
- Even as news of Saddam's capture sank in, car bombs ripped
through two police stations in the capital, the latest in a series of attacks
U.S. forces blame on loyalists of Saddam and on foreign "terrorists"
infiltrating Iraq.
-
- President Bush warned that catching Saddam would not
end attacks by people who do not "accept the rise of liberty in the
heart of the Middle East," implying a pledge of a better life many
Iraqis said Bush was failing to keep.
-
- "AFGHANISTAN"
-
- "It's great that he's caught, but it wasn't him
who screwed up the petrol and the electricity and everything else so badly,
so now a canister of gas that was 250 dinars costs 4,000, if you can get
one," said Ghazi, a 52-year-old dentist, from his car as he queued
with hundreds of other drivers waiting for petrol.
-
- "This is an oil country and it should be rich. It
should not be Afghanistan."
-
- Other drivers echoed the complaints of chronic fuel shortages
in a country with the world's second-largest oil reserves, as well as of
their treatment at the hands of troops who have killed civilians while
hunting suspected Saddam partisans or pursuing criminals with Iraqi police.
-
- "The Americans promised freedom and prosperity;
what's this? Go up to their headquarters, at one of those checkpoints where
they point their guns at you, and tell them that you hate them as much
as Saddam, and see what they do to you," said Mohammad Saleh, 39,
a building contractor.
-
- "The only difference is that Saddam would kill you
in private, where the Americans will kill you in public," he said.
-
- "A lot of things -- safety, freedom, prosperity
-- that we were supposed to have are gone. They promised many things, and
now that they have caught Saddam maybe they kept one."
-
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-
- http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3991873
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