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May 23, 2007 Wednesday Jamadi-ul-Awwal 06, 1428





Iraqis in besieged city living a dead life



By Ali al-Fadhily


SAMARRA: At least 10 residents have died as the result of a curfew imposed by the US-backed Iraqi government, local doctors say.

Residents in this city of 300,000 located 125 km north of Baghdad have been struggling to find food, water and medical supplies. Vehicles have been banned from entering or leaving the city since May 6.

The Iraqi government and the US military imposed a strict curfew on the city that day after a suicide car bomb killed a dozen police officers, including police chief Abd al-Jalil al-Dulaimi. Samarra has been a hotspot of resistance to the US occupation of Iraq since close to the beginning of the occupation in March 2003.

After the attack, US and Iraqi forces encircled the city and sealed off all entrances with concrete blocks and sand bags.

Local people told the news agency that the main bridge in the city has been closed, ambulances have not been allowed to reach people, and residents are facing an increasingly dire situation.

“We are being butchered here by these Americans,” Majid Hamid, a schoolteacher in Samarra told reporters. “People are dying because we lack all of the necessities, and our government seems to be so happy about it.”

Residents and service providers informed that electricity has been cut.

“There is no life in the city because of the collective punishments,” an employee in the electricity service office of Samarra, speaking on condition of anonymity, said. “Depriving people of electricity means depriving them of water, healthcare and all of life’s maintenance necessities, especially with such hot temperatures now.”

The power grid and water supply in Samarra were already in a state of disrepair.

The correspondent has been in the city several times throughout the occupation and witnessed first-hand the US military tactics of cutting water and electricity to residents after occupation forces had been attacked. The US and Iraqi military tactics have also included bulldozing houses, home raids and detentions.

“This is not the first siege that we have suffered,” Nahla Alwan, a pharmacist in the city told the news agency. “The Americans have done this so often and they will keep doing it since we do not accept their occupation and all the disasters it has brought us.”

She added, “They should know that we resent them more now, and we will teach the future generations to take revenge for the innocent souls killed by the American criminals.”

A doctor in Samarra’s main hospital, speaking like many others on condition of anonymity, said that at least 10 people, including seven babies, had died because of lack of fuel for generators needed to run incubators and life-saving equipment. At least two elderly patients were among the dead.

Despite pleas from residents to US and Iraqi forces to allow in aid, none has arrived and the curfew continues.

“My 10-month-old nephew died of asthma because we could not take him to the hospital,” 25-year-old Nameer Aboud from the Abbasiya quarter of Samarra told reporters.

“All medical services are paralysed because of this siege applied on Samarra, and many people are dying. If this had happened anywhere else in the world, it would have been considered murder, but for the world Iraqi blood is cheap.”

“This collective punishment is unfair and it clearly shows how cruel Americans are,” said a member of Samarra’s city council. “They are punishing innocent people in a cowardly way.”

The Iraqi humanitarian group Doctors for Iraq has stated:“Doctors for Iraq condemns in the strongest terms any activities that prevent civilians from accessing healthcare or humanitarian assistance by all actors engaged in the conflict.”

The doctors demanded immediate end to the blockade, which they called “an act of collective punishment.” They called for local NGOs and health workers to be allowed access to the city.

A spokesperson for the US military in Iraq admitted to reporters that the security measures imposed on Samarra had “made living very difficult,” but claimed that “local authorities” had imposed them.—Dawn/The IPS News Service






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