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A Tale of One City, Now Two
by Ali al-Fadhily The separation of religious groups in the face of sectarian violence has brought some semblance of relative calm to Baghdad. But many Iraqis see this as the uncertain consequence of a divide and rule policy.
Claims are going the rounds that sectarian violence in Iraq has fallen, and that the U.S. military "surge" has succeeded in reducing attacks against civilians. Baghdad residents speak of the other side of the coin that they live now in a largely divided city that has brought this uneasy calm.
BAGHDAD, Nov 12 (IPS) - "I would like to agree with the idea that violence in Iraq has
decreased and that everything is fine," retired general Waleed
al-Ubaidy told IPS in Baghdad. "But the truth is far more bitter. All
that has happened is a dramatic change in the demographic map of Iraq."
And as with Baquba and other violence-hit areas of Iraq, he says
a part of the story in Baghdad is that there is nobody left to tell it.
"Most of the honest journalists have left."
"Baghdad has been
torn into two cities and many towns and neighbourhoods," Ahmad Ali,
chief engineer from one of Baghdad's municipalities told IPS. "There is
now the Shia Baghdad and the Sunni Baghdad to start with. Then, each is
divided into little town-like pieces of the hundreds of thousands who
had to leave their homes."
Many Baghdad residents say that the claims of reduced violence can be tested only when refugees go back home.
Many
areas of Baghdad that were previously mixed are now totally Shia or
totally Sunni. This follows the sectarian cleansing in mixed
neighbourhoods by militias and death squads.
On the Russafa side
of Tigris River, al-Adhamiya is now fully Sunni; the other areas are
all Shia. The al-Karkh side of the river is purely Sunni except for
Shula, Hurriya and small strips of Aamil which are dominated by Shia
militias.
"If the situation is good, why are five million Iraqis
living in exile," says 55- year-old Abu Mohammad who was evicted from
Shula in West Baghdad to become a refugee in Amiriya, a few miles from
his lost home.
"Americans and Iranians have succeeded in
realising their old dream of dividing the Iraqi people into sects. That
is the only success they can talk about."
Violence is no more
hitting the headlines, but it clearly continues. Bodies of Iraqis
killed after being tortured are still found in garbage dumps, although
fewer than a few months ago.
"Iraqi and American officials
should be ashamed of talking of 'unidentified bodies'," Haja Fadhila
from the Ghazaliya area of western Baghdad told IPS. "These are the
bodies of Iraqis who had families to support, and names to be proud of.
But nobody talks about them, there is no media. It is as if it is all
taking place on Mars."
The Iraqi ministries for health and
interior have said that they are finding on average five to ten
"unidentified bodies" on the streets of Baghdad every day.
"Those
Americans and their Iraqi collaborators in the Green Zone talk of five
or ten bodies being found everyday as if they were talking of insects,"
Thamir Aziz, a teacher in Adhamiya told IPS. "We know they are lying
about the real number of martyrs, but even if it's true, is it not a
disaster that so many innocent Iraqis are found dead every day?"
Most people blame the Iraqi police for the sectarian assassinations, and the U.S. military for doing little to stop them.
"The
Americans ask (Prime Minister Nouri al) Maliki to stop the sectarian
assassinations when they know very well that his ministers are ordering
the sectarian cleansing," Mahmood Farhan from the Muslim Scholars
Association, a leading Sunni group, told IPS.
A UN report
released September 2005 held interior ministry forces responsible for
an organised campaign of detentions, torture and killings. It said
special police commando units accused of carrying out the killings were
recruited from the Shia Badr and Mehdi militias.
Retired Col.
James Steele, who served as advisor to Iraqi security forces under
former U.S. ambassador John Negroponte, supervised the training of
these forces.
Steele had been commander of the U.S. military
advisors group in El Salvador in 1984-86; Negroponte was U.S.
ambassador to neighbouring Honduras 1981-85. Negroponte was accused of
widespread human rights violations by the Honduras Commission on Human
Rights in 1994. The Commission reported the torture and disappearance
of at least 184 political workers.
The violations Negroponte
oversaw in Honduras were carried out by operatives trained by the CIA,
according to a CIA working group set up in 1996 to look into the U.S.
role in Honduras.
The CIA records document that "special
intelligence units", better known as "death squads", comprised
CIA-trained Honduran armed units which kidnapped, tortured and killed
thousands of people suspected of supporting leftist guerrillas.
Negroponte was ambassador to Iraq for close to a year from June 2004.
Ali al-Fadhily,
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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