[NYTr] Beyond the Green Zone: Samarra Under US Attack
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Thu Sep 6 17:47:20 EDT 2007
IPS - Sep 6, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=39164
IRAQ: Samarra Under U.S. Attack
By Ali al-Fadhily
BAGHDAD, Sep 6 (IPS) - Residents are fleeing Samarra city in the face
of fierce fighting between U.S. forces and resistance groups.
New defiance is rising against U.S. forces following military "crimes",
fleeing residents say.
"On Sunday the 26th of August, there was fierce fighting between armed
men and American forces in the Armooshiya district, and I saw Americans
evacuate many of their soldiers by stretchers," a man who fled Samarra
for Baghdad, speaking on condition of anonymity, told IPS. "As usual,
Americans took revenge by bombing the district."
A woman who also fled Samarra for the capital in recent days, who gave
her name as Iman, told IPS that the U.S. military had "committed
another crime in the medicine factory residence area" when "they bombed
a house there and killed a woman with her seven children."
The Sunni and anti-occupation Muslim Scholars Association issued a
statement confirming these two assaults, and condemning the "ugly
crimes" of occupation forces in Samarra. The Association accused the
U.S. military of attempting to break the spirit of Iraqis who reject
the U.S. occupation.
"They think their crimes would stop Iraqis from demanding their rights
for liberty and prosperity, but the results are always different from
what the American leaders hope," Sheikh Taha from the Muslim Scholars'
Association told IPS in Baghdad.
"They are only pushing more Iraqis to be armed against them, and you
can see that the facts on the ground are the opposite of what they tell
their people. Their soldiers are getting killed every day and they
(U.S. military) are losing in Iraq."
A young man spoke with IPS on condition of anonymity outside a Sunni
mosque in Baghdad where refugees from Samarra were arriving.
"We will be the thorn that makes Bush's life more difficult," he told
IPS. "I am only here to ensure the safety of my family, then I will go
back to my city to defend it against all strangers."
Located 125 km north of Baghdad, Samarra has seen fierce fighting
between the Iraqi resistance and U.S. military units since the
beginning of the U.S. occupation of Iraq in 2003.
The Sunni dominated city of 200,000 has suffered continuing raids by
U.S. and Iraqi forces that have hit civilian life hard.
The resistance seems to have grown as the attacks have continued.
"Four years of occupation have caused this city a great deal of
damage," Thul-Faqar Ali, a lawyer and human rights activist who fled
Samarra to Baghdad told IPS. "It is true that there was strong
resistance to the occupation, but most of those who got killed, injured
or detained were innocent civilians. The U.S. occupation forces in
Samarra were so brutal that they conducted many executions on site."
One of the first instances of brutal U.S. military execution of Iraqis
in Samarra came in 2004 when eyewitnesses told the press that U.S.
soldiers threw two young men into the Tigris River and watched one of
them drown.
Marwan Hassoun, the surviving Iraqi, later testified in a U.S. military
court that he and his cousin were stopped on their return to Samarra
and forced at gunpoint into the Tigris River as U.S. soldiers laughed.
The cousin who died was named as 19-year-old Zaidoun Fadel Hassoun.
"I could hear them laughing," Marwan told a reporter of the Jan. 3,
2004 incident, recalling how U.S. soldiers pushed him and his cousin
into the river. "They were behaving like they were watching a comedy on
stage."
A U.S. Army sergeant involved in the incident, Sgt. 1st Class Tracy
Perkins, 33, was later acquitted of involuntary manslaughter but
convicted of assault. Many other such instances have been reported
since.
[Ali, our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with
Dahr Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who travels
extensively in the region)]
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