Wednesday, November 10, 2004

Fw: Baghdad Burning

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Karim A G
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 7:51 PM
Subject: Baghdad Burning

 http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/

 

Baghdad Burning

 

... I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where hearts can heal and souls can mend...

Wednesday, November 10, 2004


Rule of Iraq Assassins Must End...
I'm not feeling well- it's a combination of the change of weather and the decline in the situation. Eid is less than a week away but no one is feeling at all festive. We're all worried about the situation in Falloojeh and surrounding regions. We've ceased worrying about the explosions in Baghdad and are now concerned with the people who have left their homes and valuables and are living off of the charity of others.

Allawi declared a "State of Emergency" a couple of days ago... A state of emergency *now* - because previous to this week, we Iraqis were living in an American made Utopia, as the world is well aware. So what does an "Emergency State" signify for Iraqis? Basically, it means we are now *officially* more prone to being detained, raided, and just generally abused by our new Iraqi forces and American ones. Today they declared a curfew on Baghdad after 10 p.m. but it hasn't really made an impact because people have stopped leaving their houses after dark anyway.

The last few days have been tense and heart-rending. Most of us are really worried about Falloojeh. Really worried about Falloojeh and all the innocents dying and dead in that city. There were several explosions in Baghdad these last few days and hardly any of them were covered by the press. All this chaos has somehow become uncomfortably normal. Two years ago I never would have dreamed of living like this- now this lifestyle has become the norm and I can barely remembering having lived any other way.

My cousin kept the kids home from school, which is happening quite often. One of the explosions today was so close, the house rocked with the impact and my cousin's wife paled, "Can you imagine if the girls had been at school when that happened- I would have died."

Dozens of civilians have died these last few days in Ramadi, Falloojeh, and Samarra. We are hearing about complete families being killed under the rain of bombs being dropped by American forces. The phone lines in those areas seem to be cut off. We've been trying to call some relatives in Ramadi for the last two days, but it's next to impossible. We keep getting that dreadful busy tone and there's just no real way of knowing what is going on in there. There is talk of the use of cluster bombs and other forbidden weaponry.

We're hearing various stories about the situation. The latest is that 36 American troops have been taken prisoner along with dozens of Iraqi troops. How do people feel about the Iraqi troops? There's a certain rage. It's difficult to sympathize with a fellow-countryman while he's killing one of his own. People generally call them "Dogs of Occupation" here because instead of guarding our borders or securing areas, they are used to secure American forces. They drive out in front of American cars in order to clear the roads and possibly detonate some of those road mines at a decent distance from the American tanks. At the end of the day, most of them are the remnants of militias and that's the way they act.

And now they are being used in Falloojeh against other Iraqis. The whole situation is making me sick and there's a fury building up. The families in Falloojeh have been relegated to living in strange homes and mosques outside of the city... many of them are setting up their families inside of emptied schools and municipal buildings in Samarra and neighboring areas. Every time I see Allawi on tv talking about his regrets about 'having to attack Falloojeh' I get so angry I could scream. He's talking to the outside world, not to us. Iraqis don't buy his crap for a instant. We watch him talk and feel furious and frustrated with our new tyrant.

I was watching CNN this morning and I couldn't get the image of the hospital in Falloojeh being stormed by Iraqi and American troops out of my head- the Iraqis being made to lay face-down on the ground, hands behind their backs. Young men and old men... and then the pictures of Abu Ghraib replay themselves in my mind. I think people would rather die than be taken prisoner by the Americans.

The borders with Syria and Jordan are also closed and many of the highways leading to the borders have been blocked. There are rumors that there are currently 100 cars ready to detonate in Mosul, being driven by suicide bombers looking for American convoys. So what happens when Mosul turns into another Falloojeh? Will they also bomb it to the ground? I heard a report where they mentioned that Zarqawi 'had probably escaped from Falloojeh'... so where is he now? Mosul?

Meanwhile, Rumsfeld is making his asinine remarks again,

"There aren't going to be large numbers of civilians killed and certainly not by U.S. forces,"

No- there are only an 'estimated' 100,000 civilians in Falloojeh (and these are American estimations). So far, boys and men between the ages of 16 and 60 aren't being counted as 'civilians' in Falloojeh. They are being rounded up and taken away. And, *of course* the US forces aren't going to be doing the killing: The bombs being dropped on Falloojeh don't contain explosives, depleted uranium or anything harmful- they contain laughing gas- that would, of course, explain Rumsfeld's idiotic optimism about not killing civilians in Falloojeh. Also, being a 'civilian' is a relative thing in a country occupied by Americans. You're only a civilian if you're on their side. If you translate for them, or serve them food in the Green Zone, or wipe their floors- you're an innocent civilian. Everyone else is an insurgent, unless they can get a job as a 'civilian'.

So this is how Bush kicks off his second term. More bloodshed.

"Innocent civilians in that city have all the guidance they need as to how they can avoid getting into trouble,"

How do they do that Rumsfeld? While tons of explosives are being dropped upon your neighborhood, how do you do that? Do you stay inside the house and try to avoid the thousands of shards of glass that shoot out at you from shattering windows? Or do you hide under a table and hope that it's sturdy enough to keep the ceiling from crushing you? Or do you flee your house and pray to God you don't come face to face with an Apache or tank or that you aren't in the line of fire of a sniper? How do you avoid the cluster bombs and all the other horror being dealt out to the people of Falloojeh?

There are a couple of things I agree with. The first is the following:

"Over time you'll find that the process of tipping will take place, that more and more of the Iraqis will be angry about the fact that their innocent people are being killed..."

He's right. It is going to have a decisive affect on Iraqi opinion- but just not the way he thinks. There was a time when pro-occupation Iraqis were able to say, "Let's give them a chance..." That time is over. Whenever someone says that lately, at best, they get a lot of nasty looks... often it's worse. A fight breaks out and a lot of yelling ensues... how can one condone occupation? How can one condone genocide? What about the mass graves of Falloojeh? Leaving Islam aside, how does one agree to allow the murder of fellow-Iraqis by the strongest military in the world?

The second thing Rumsfeld said made me think he was reading my mind:

"Rule of Iraq assassins must end..." I couldn't agree more: Get out Americans.


 

 

Fw: A View of the US Election From Japan


----- Original Message -----
From: "YumiKikuchi きくちゆみ"
To: "carol wolman"
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 6:24 PM
Subject: A View of the US Election From Japan


> A view of the US election from Japan
>
> by Yumi Kikuchi
>
> I watched the US election closely and I would like to share how I feel.
> Democracy is dying in the US (and maybe in Japan, too) Who won this
> election is won by swindling voting machine and by not counting all the
> vote accurately. We all know that. We hear so many stories of fraud,
> yet how come no US media is covering it?
>
> What happened to the country of the freedom and democracy?
> Why are you fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan and sending soldiers all
> over the world? Isn't that all for protecting freedom and democracy?
> But the election, the base of democracy and freedom, is full of fraud,
> isn't it? No country will trust the US after such an election.
>
> We run organic farm and guest house in Japan and we take 3 months
> vacation every winter. Our favorite destination was always USA, but
> not from this winter on. I do not feel like visiting USA anymore.
> It is not fun to be treated like criminals at US airports (i.e.
Fingerprint
> has to be
> taken due to Homeland Security). It is not fun to spend money in the
> country that doesn't care the pain and suffering of so many people who
> lost their loved ones by bombs and missiles paid by the US tax. If I
visit
> the
> US and spend money, it would support that. SO, we shall stop visiting the
> US at least for 4 years.
>
> I feel like organizing "Boycott US campaign". To begin with, Japan should
> stop buying US government bonds, which has been funding the US war.
> Yes, that is where I should start. So, what will you start?
>
> Dear Americans for peace and justice,
> Please take back your country.
> Where is your democracy?
> Where is your freedom?
> Are you just watching your country to be taken over by neo-cons,
super-rich
> and
> Christian fundamentalists?
> Wake up. Wake up before your country destroy whole planet.
> The US has 5 % of the world population, yet consumes over 40 % of
> world resources, emiting more CO2 than anyone else. Ice is melting at the
> north
> and south poles. We can lose everything by global warming. This is the
> fight we
> have to really fight together. Not against the terrorists, but against
the
> global warming.
> (By the way, who is the real terrorist on earth? Majority of the world
> would say G.W. Bush, I bet.)
>
> Children and babies are crying and dying in Fallujah. Stop killing
> innocents.
> Investigate your election. Investigate 911. Go to www.911inplanesite.com
> Find the truth and let it prevail.
> Be courageous and compassionate. Please remember how your country
> was found by those great founding fathers.
> We all make mistakes, but when we notice them, we can change.
> It is time to change the direction of your country, or we won't survive.
>
> Japan has been following the USA as we used to believe the US is the
> greatest country of freedom and democracy. Few Japanese believe
> that any more after this election and I bet I am not the only Japanese who
> stop visiting the USA.
>
> love and peace,
> Yumi
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "carol wolman"
> To: "YumiKikuchi きくちゆみ"
> Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 5:08 PM
> Subject: Re: Help America Audit -- 5 Things You Can Do Immediately by Bev
> Harris- Black Box Voting
>
>
> Write something about the view of the US election from Japan. We need to
> see ourselves from the outside. Peace, Carol
>
>

Fw: Election Day 2004 From Cam Kerry

Election Day 2004

 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 1:56 PM
Subject: Election Day 2004

I am grateful to the many people who have contacted me to express their
deep concern about questions of miscounting, fraud, vote suppression, and
other problems on election day, especially in Florida and Ohio. Their
concern reflects how much people care about the outcome of this election.

I want to you to know we are not ignoring it. Election protection lawyers
are still on the job in Ohio and Florida and in DC making sure all the
votes are counted accurately. I have been conferring with lawyers
involved and have made them aware of the information and concerns people
have given me. Even if the facts don't provide a basis to change the
outcome, the information will inform the continuing effort to protect the
integrity of our elections.

If you have specific factual information about voting problems that could
be helpful to the lawyers doing their job, please send it to
vri@dnc.org
rather than to me.

The election protection effort has been important to me personally, and I
am proud of the 17,000 lawyers around the country who helped. It's
obvious that we have a way to go still, but their efforts helped make a
difference. Their work goes on.

Thank you,

Cam Kerry

For today: the dark valley- report from Fallujah

Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil,
For Thou art with me.
Thy rod and Thy staff, they comfort me.
Psalm 23: 4
 
Dear Friends,
 
We, the peacemakers, are entering a dark valley.  The warmongers wasted no time after the election to let slip their dogs on Fallujah.   If we stand with the people of Fallujah, we may be accused of sympathizing with terrorists.  Yet what else can we do?
 
I am doubly sad as I continue to observe Ramadan, knowing that very few of you, my fellow peacemakers, responded to my plea to join me in this Muslim observance.  If you had, perhaps things would be different in Iraq today. 
 
We the people have so much more power these days.  In a week, we've turned a certain victory for Bush into a disputed election.  The momentum is on for a recount in Ohio and a much closer look at Florida.  Kerry, reportedly, is reconsidering his concession.  Maybe the bastards won't get away with it, for once.
 
But the post-election furor is distracting us from the massacre currently taking place in Fallujah.  Opposition to participation in the slaughter is running high in England, but here in America, we seem oblivious to the new horrors being committed in our name.
 
I'm not saying we should quit contesting the election.  Even if Bush remains pResident, we must deny him legitimacy as much as possible, and lay the groundwork now for impeachment. 
 
But we must fight on two fronts, at home and abroad.  The only crime of the people of Fallujah is to want to determine the fate of their country, without interference from the US and its puppet Allawi.  Just as we are fighting for freedom and justice in the US, so they are fighting as patriots.
 
God is with us, the peacemakers, as we walk through this dark valley.  Jesus gave us a special blessing in Matthew 5: 9 "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God".    Jesus never blessed the warmongers, but constantly berated the rulers for hypocrisy.
 
Let us lean on Him, allow His rod and staff to comfort us.  His rod stands for self-discipline, for keeping focused and nonviolent.  His staff stands for courage, the strength to tell the truth no matter where it leads.  Let us call for a stop to the massacre in Fallujah, now.
 
In the name of the Prince of Peace,   Carol Wolman

  'Scores of civilians' killed in Falluja
by Reuters-  Tuesday 09 November 2004 7:51 PM GMT
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/813419D5-CC95-4505-9367-05140111C618.htm

Residents say scores of civilians have been killed

Muhammad Abbud said he watched his nine-year-old son bleed to death
at their Falluja home, unable to take him to hospital as fighting
raged in the streets and bombs rained down on the Iraqi city.

In the midst of a US onslaught and hemmed in by a round-the-clock
curfew, he said he had little choice but to bury his eldest son,
Ghaith, in the garden.

"My son got shrapnel in his stomach when our house was hit at dawn,
but we couldn't take him for treatment," said Abbud, a teacher. "We
buried him in the garden because it was too dangerous to go out. We
did not know how long the fighting would last."

Residents say scores of civilians have been killed or wounded in 24
hours of fighting since US-led forces pushed deep into the city on
Monday evening.

Doctors said people brought in at least 15 dead civilians at the main
clinic in Falluja on Monday. By Tuesday, there were no clinics open,
residents said, and no way to count casualties.

Medical supplies low

US and Iraqi forces seized control of the city's main hospital,
across the Euphrates river from Falluja proper, hours before the
onslaught began.

US forces have been steadily moving deeper into the city
Overnight US bombardments hit a clinic inside the Sunni Muslim city,
killing doctors, nurses and patients, residents said. US military
authorities denied the reports.

Interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi said troops detained 38
fighters entrenched at Falluja hospital and accused doctors there of
exaggerating civilian casualties.

Sami al-Jumaili, a doctor at Falluja hospital, said the city was
running out of medical supplies.

"There is not a single surgeon in Falluja. We had one ambulance hit
by US fire and a doctor wounded. There are scores of injured
civilians in their homes who we can't move," he said by telephone
from a house where he had gone to help the wounded.

"A 13-year-old child just died in my hands."

ICRC voices concern

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Tuesday
that it was extremely worried about the fate of people wounded in the
battle for control of the Iraqi city of Falluja.

"The ICRC urges the belligerents to ensure that all those in need of
such care - whether friend or foe - be given access to medical
facilities and that medical personnel and vehicles can function
without hindrance at all times," a statement said.

The organisation said it was "deeply concerned about reports that the
injured cannot receive adequate medical care".

Families flee

Weekend air raids destroyed a clinic funded by an Islamic relief
organisation in the centre of Falluja and a nearby warehouse used to
store medical supplies, witnesses said.

Residents say there is no power and food supplies are running low
Many families fled the city of 300,000 long before the offensive
began. An official from a Sunni Muslim group with links to some
fighters in Falluja said on Monday only about 60,000 people remained.

Residents say they have no power and are using kerosene lamps at
night. They say they keep to ground floors for safety. Food shops
have been closed for six days.

"My kids are hysterical with fear," said Farhan Salih. "They are
traumatised by the sound but there is nowhere to take them."

US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said on Monday he did not
foresee large numbers of civilian casualties in the assault, saying
US forces were disciplined and precise.

Those words were of little comfort to the Abbud family, sitting in a
house damaged by the bomb that killed their child.

"We just bandaged his stomach and gave him water, but he was losing a
lot of blood. He died this afternoon," said Abbud.

Reuters
By

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/813419D5-CC95-4505-9367-05140111C618.htm