The Allawi administration's declaration of a state of emergency in Iraq seems like a morbid non sequitur. Has there been anything less than an emergency in occupied Iraq since the US-led invasion? The logic was to consider ways to initiate a political process in the country. This is also what everyone had wished would follow Mr George Bush's re-election. Instead, there's only the promise of more bloodshed. Fallujah is to be cleansed of resistance fighters.
The commander of the US Marine Corps First Division told his troops waiting to launch their assault on Fallujah: "You will be making history..... Forty years from now, 100 years from now, they (people) will be talking about the battle of Fallujah." It is such talk that has led soldiers in their prime to death and killed innocent civilians. Fallujah's population is estimated at around 300,000. Many have fled, but many remain.
How many of them will be dead by the time the Marines have 'secured' the city? The civilian death figure for Iraq has already crossed the 100,000 mark. Fallujah will add to the number of civilians killed and injured. It was assaulted also in April, and hundreds were killed; yet it remains restive.
The boastful Marine general must have taken leave of his senses. A month ago, Samarra was captured and 'freed': violence has broken out there again. Mr Allawi says he wants the country cleared of all resistance by the time of the elections proposed for January. As in Samarra, a curfew has also been imposed in Fallujah. This may keep civilians indoors, but their houses and hospitals will still be susceptible to air attacks by the occupying forces. There will be soldiers kicking doors open and rounding up 'suspects'.
The rebels will melt away and strike again. It is impossible to believe that the Americans continue to harbour the notion that the situation in Iraq can be controlled before the election on the strength of sheer force and terror. The US must return to the international community and seek its help in ending the tragedy of Iraq.
Crumbling state of Iqbal Manzil
As we celebrate Iqbal Day today, it is worth noting that Iqbal Manzil, the poet's birthplace in Sialkot, lies in a state of utter disrepair. A report in this newspaper yesterday detailed the vagaries of official neglect that have come to bear on this protected national monument - thanks to the apathy of the Punjab archaeology department, the official custodian of the building. The 145-year-old house is in such a bad state that its upper storey has been closed to visitors, with the authorities fearing its collapse.
The few exhibits in the form of books and articles of Allama Iqbal's personal use and housed in the building are stated to be in no better condition. This is despite repeated promises by the Sialkot tehsil municipal administration and the Punjab government, both of which have expressed the desire to see Iqbal Manzil restored to the status of a proper museum, but have failed to do anything about it in practical terms.
One fails to see how the Punjab archaeology department, which is almost bankrupt, will do justice by Iqbal Manzil. According to reports, the department has no funds to even pay the salaries of the staff deputed at the high-profile Lahore Fort and the Shalimar Gardens - both listed by Unesco as world heritage monuments. Back in Sialkot, it also is a measure of apathy on the part of the city's affluent industrial sector that Iqbal Manzil has fallen into its present dire straits.
Elsewhere in the world, a building with similar historical significance would have been the pride of the host city and much better looked after. That said, the proper upkeep of a national monument like Iqbal Manzil remains primarily the responsibility of the government. The Punjab government would do well to shoulder this responsibility with the attention and care that it deserves.