"Report From Baghdad" Part One--Introduction
Lee Siu Hin | 15.09.2003 10:21 | Analysis | Anti-militarism | Repression | World
With 6-months commemoration of U.S. invaison of Iraq (Sep 20) coming. Pacifica Radio KPFK Los Angeles Reporter Lee Siu Hin's July 2003 trip to U.S. occupied Iraq, compiled a 6-parts series call "Report from Iraq", includes: People of Iraq, former Iraqi military commander, U.S. Military, human rights workers from UNICEF, Voice in the Wilderness, Amnesty International; Shi'ite and Sunni religious leaders from Baghdad, Fllujah, and more!
"Report from Baghdad"
Part One of Six--Introduction
By: Lee Siu Hin
"There are prisons not in darkness, nor built of bars.
There are prisons in our souls.
Darkness is over, but sorrow is overflowing:
an attitude controls
everything everywhere)
and protects those who came –
it doesn't care about our patience..."
-Excerpt from the poem "Freedom's Panorama"
by Muthana Mudher Mohammed.
Everywhere in Iraq, you can see the destruction from the US-UK invasions. Baghdad is a highly polluted city: hot air mixed with dust from destroyed buildings and auto pollution makes everyone very uncomfortable. Half of the city's utilities, destroyed in the 1991 Gulf War and never rebuilt because of sanctions, are now newly destroyed from the U.S. invasion last March and never repaired. June to August is the hottest period in Iraq, every day over 100 degrees of dry heat. With no electricity to run air conditioning and no clean running water, people feel as though they are living in hell. Respiratory disease and heat stroke are very common, especially for the old people and children, and heat-related deaths have increased at an alarmingly high rate.
A U.S. military-imposed curfew of 11:00 PM in Baghdad and many other Iraqi cities; American Humvees and tanks speeding across the city with machine guns and license to do whatever they want; a country without government; a people feeling without hope - this is the reality of Iraq today.
Many Iraqis are angry that while U.S. occupiers have the advanced technology to deploy their missiles to hit the exact target, they cannot fix the city's power lines. Three months, 100 days, after the U.S. invasion, there is still almost no U.S. public assistance for suffering Iraqis, and no rebuilding efforts by U.S. administrators or military in Iraq.
With over 140,000 U.S. troops (or what they call "coalition forces") in Iraq, the U.S. military has overwhelming firepower, yet they are only concerned with using them to hunt Saddam Hussein and his followers - what they call "very bad people"- or protecting Iraqi oil industries. They couldn't care less, however, about social crimes, and public security on the street has completely deteriorated.
Human rights workers unofficially report that, since the end of the "major combat" in May to July, up to 2,000 people have been murdered in social crimes in Baghdad alone. Since I returned from Iraq, at least three people who I met in Iraq either directly or indirectly, have been killed. In some ways, the streets of Baghdad remind me a lot of life in the "hoods" of inner-city America...
**************************************************************************************************
***"Report From Baghdad" CD-ROM on Sale!!***
Dear peace activists:
Pacifica Radio KPFK Los Angeles Reporter Lee Siu Hin's July 2003 trip to U.S. occupied Iraq. An interactive CD-ROM with articles, over 50 photos, and hours of audio & video interviews includes:
- People of Iraq, former Iraqi military commander, general manger of
- U.S. Military: interview at U.S. military base, and follow their patrol and raid in Baghdad;
- Human rights workers from UNICEF, Voice in the Wilderness, Amnesty International;
- Shi'ite and Sunni religious leaders from Baghdad, Fllujah, and more!
You can see part of the CD-ROM contents on our webpage:
http://www.actionla.org/Iraq/IraqReport/index.html
Each CD costs: $15.00 plus $3.50 S/H (work both PC and Mac)
The CD sells will be benefit the Baghdad Independent Media Center, ActionLA, and PeaceNoWar.net
*Additional donations are welcome, and it will be tax deductible.
For more information, tel: (213)413-1778 e-mail: info@ActionLA.org
URL: www.ActionLA.org
www.PeaceNoWar.net
Send check/money orders to:
ActionLA/SEE
1013 Mission St. #6, South Pasadena, CA 91030
U.S.A.
Sincerely
Lee Siu Hin
=============================================================
Peace, No War
War is not the answer, for only love can conquer hate
Not in our Name! And another world is possible!
Information for antiwar movements, news across the World, please visit:
http://www.PeaceNoWar.net
Please Join PeaceNoWar Listserv, send e-mail to: mailto: peacenowar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
*PeaceNoWar is an activist project of ActionLA
Action for World Liberation Everyday!
URL: http://www.ActionLA.org
e-mail: ActionLA@ActionLA.org
Please join our ActionLA Listserv
Part One of Six--Introduction
By: Lee Siu Hin
"There are prisons not in darkness, nor built of bars.
There are prisons in our souls.
Darkness is over, but sorrow is overflowing:
an attitude controls
everything everywhere)
and protects those who came –
it doesn't care about our patience..."
-Excerpt from the poem "Freedom's Panorama"
by Muthana Mudher Mohammed.
Everywhere in Iraq, you can see the destruction from the US-UK invasions. Baghdad is a highly polluted city: hot air mixed with dust from destroyed buildings and auto pollution makes everyone very uncomfortable. Half of the city's utilities, destroyed in the 1991 Gulf War and never rebuilt because of sanctions, are now newly destroyed from the U.S. invasion last March and never repaired. June to August is the hottest period in Iraq, every day over 100 degrees of dry heat. With no electricity to run air conditioning and no clean running water, people feel as though they are living in hell. Respiratory disease and heat stroke are very common, especially for the old people and children, and heat-related deaths have increased at an alarmingly high rate.
A U.S. military-imposed curfew of 11:00 PM in Baghdad and many other Iraqi cities; American Humvees and tanks speeding across the city with machine guns and license to do whatever they want; a country without government; a people feeling without hope - this is the reality of Iraq today.
Many Iraqis are angry that while U.S. occupiers have the advanced technology to deploy their missiles to hit the exact target, they cannot fix the city's power lines. Three months, 100 days, after the U.S. invasion, there is still almost no U.S. public assistance for suffering Iraqis, and no rebuilding efforts by U.S. administrators or military in Iraq.
With over 140,000 U.S. troops (or what they call "coalition forces") in Iraq, the U.S. military has overwhelming firepower, yet they are only concerned with using them to hunt Saddam Hussein and his followers - what they call "very bad people"- or protecting Iraqi oil industries. They couldn't care less, however, about social crimes, and public security on the street has completely deteriorated.
Human rights workers unofficially report that, since the end of the "major combat" in May to July, up to 2,000 people have been murdered in social crimes in Baghdad alone. Since I returned from Iraq, at least three people who I met in Iraq either directly or indirectly, have been killed. In some ways, the streets of Baghdad remind me a lot of life in the "hoods" of inner-city America...
**************************************************************************************************
***"Report From Baghdad" CD-ROM on Sale!!***
Dear peace activists:
Pacifica Radio KPFK Los Angeles Reporter Lee Siu Hin's July 2003 trip to U.S. occupied Iraq. An interactive CD-ROM with articles, over 50 photos, and hours of audio & video interviews includes:
- People of Iraq, former Iraqi military commander, general manger of
- U.S. Military: interview at U.S. military base, and follow their patrol and raid in Baghdad;
- Human rights workers from UNICEF, Voice in the Wilderness, Amnesty International;
- Shi'ite and Sunni religious leaders from Baghdad, Fllujah, and more!
You can see part of the CD-ROM contents on our webpage:
http://www.actionla.org/Iraq/IraqReport/index.html
Each CD costs: $15.00 plus $3.50 S/H (work both PC and Mac)
The CD sells will be benefit the Baghdad Independent Media Center, ActionLA, and PeaceNoWar.net
*Additional donations are welcome, and it will be tax deductible.
For more information, tel: (213)413-1778 e-mail: info@ActionLA.org
URL: www.ActionLA.org
www.PeaceNoWar.net
Send check/money orders to:
ActionLA/SEE
1013 Mission St. #6, South Pasadena, CA 91030
U.S.A.
Sincerely
Lee Siu Hin
=============================================================
Peace, No War
War is not the answer, for only love can conquer hate
Not in our Name! And another world is possible!
Information for antiwar movements, news across the World, please visit:
http://www.PeaceNoWar.net
Please Join PeaceNoWar Listserv, send e-mail to: mailto: peacenowar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
*PeaceNoWar is an activist project of ActionLA
Action for World Liberation Everyday!
URL: http://www.ActionLA.org
e-mail: ActionLA@ActionLA.org
Please join our ActionLA Listserv
Lee Siu Hin
e-mail:
siuhin@aol.com
Homepage:
http://www.actionla.org/Iraq/IraqReport/index.html