The rigged nation
backside | 03.04.2003 20:14
The rigged nation
Since 12 years the CIA would'nt liquidize Hussein so that they could wage a war
against the 'evil weapons' delivered by US and for 'US Democracy'(the license to kill
at every place and time they want).
In the meantime clusterbombs go down on Iraq, the pates from children become tear off
by projectiles of panic liberators, exempt Iraqis get compel to laugh in the camera for the evening show in disneyland with an brutish propaganda campaign, Goebbels would'nt believe, at that military speaker Brooks answers with thick-skulled hollow
words to probing questions:
'no evil weapos here, we don't know nothing, the others have it done, We have to check out, we don't know nothing till we have clarify it you have yet forgotten it (your numskulls)' and ' any iraqi civilian is a terrorist so long as he has proven the converse...'
They can shoot them promptly or haul out to cuba with plastic bags over their heads tied up as living packets to molder there because they take in and speak not the speech of their slayers.
Slowly but surely the Brit savvy with what a kind of critters they have to do.
How long the world keep still in consideration of this blackguards?
To do nothing means to accept!!!
BEAT THE SYSTEM AT MAIN NERVE
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Western Journalists Beaten, Starved by Americans
Essam Al-Ghalib, Arab News War Correspondent
KUWAIT CITY, 3 April 2003 — Two Western journalists have arrived safely back in Kuwait
City after being arrested, beaten up and deprived of food and water in Iraq — by
members of the US Army’s military police.
Arab News has learned that Luis Castro and Victor Silva, both reporters working for
RTP Portuguese television, were held for four days, had their equipment, vehicle and
video tapes confiscated, and were then escorted out of Iraq by the 101st Airborne
Division.
Despite possessing the proper “Unilateral Journalist” accreditation issued by the
Coalition Forces Central Command, both journalists were detained.
Their ordeal at the hands of the Americans is in stark contrast to that received by
Newsday journalists in Baghdad, who yesterday in Jordan described as “humane” their
treatment at the hands of their Iraqi interrogators despite suffering various
indignities. “I have covered 10 wars in the past six years — in Angola, Afghanistan,
Zaire, and East Timor. I have been arrested three times in Africa, but have never been
subjected to such treatment or been physically beaten before,” Castro said in an
exclusive interview with Arab News.
“The Americans call themselves liberators and freedom fighters, but look what they
have done to us,” he added.
Castro and Silva entered Iraq 10 days ago. They had been to Umm Qasr and Basra and
were traveling to Najaf when they were stopped by the military police.
According to Castro, their accredited identification was checked and they were given
the all clear to proceed.
“Suddenly, for no reason, the situation changed,” Castro told Arab News. “We were
ordered down on the ground by the soldiers. They stepped on our hands and backs and
handcuffed us.
“We were put in our own car. The soldiers used our satellite phones to call their
families at home. I begged them to allow me to use my own phone to call my family, but
they refused. When I protested, they pushed me to the ground and kicked me in the ribs
and legs.”
“I believe the reason we were detained was because we are not embedded with the US
forces,” he continued. “Embedded journalists are always escorted by military minders.
What they write is controlled and, through them, the military feeds its own version of
the facts to the world. When independent journalists such as us come around, we pose a
threat because they cannot control what we write.”
After being held for four days, they were transported to the 101st Airborne Division
to be escorted out of Iraq.
Castro told Arab News: “A lieutenant in charge of the military police told me, ‘My men
are like dogs, they are trained only to attack, please try to understand’.”
The journalists were then transported by truck to Camp Udairi to await a helicopter
transfer out of Iraq. At Camp Udairi, they told their stories to members of the US
Marines.
One soldier, who Castro asked not be identified, wrote out a note, which was shown to
Arab News. The note said: “I am so sorry that you had to endure such bad conditions,
but remember that I care and pray you can forgive.”
“The Americans in Iraq are totally crazy and are afraid of everything that moves. I
would have expected this to happen to us at the hands of the Iraqis, but not at the
hands of the Americans. This is typical of the American attitude, as related to us by
British forces. The attitude is ‘shoot first and ask questions later’”, Castro added.
Castro, a veteran journalist, has had all his tapes and equipment returned to him, but
not his jeep.
When asked by Arab News what he intends to do next, he replied: “Return to Iraq as
soon as possible to tell the truth to the world about what is happening there.”
http://www.arabnews.com/Article.asp?ID=24644
backside
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