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Pacifica Reports From Iraq
Pacifica Correspondent Aaron Glantz
is making his second trip to Iraq since the fall of Saddam
Hussein. He will be filing a series of reports from Iraq,
exclusively for Pacifica.org, called Pacifica Reports From
Iraq.
Below is a list of these reports:
May
12 - US Army vs. the Posters of Muqtada al-Sadr
Iraq – US soldiers, backed by tanks and helicopters,
launched a fresh attack today against fighters loyal to the
firebrand cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in the Iraqi city of Kerbala.
The Associated Press reports up to 25 Iraqis and seven US
soldiers were wounded in the battle, which began only hours
after Iraqi leaders had agreed on a proposal aimed at ending
the US standoff with Mr Sadr's Mahdi army militia...
more
May
5 - More Abuses from the Gates of Abu Ghraib
Abu Ghraib, Iraq – President George W. Bush continued
his efforts to contain outrage over the torture scandal at
Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison – formerly Saddam
Hussein’s most notorious lock-up. Speaking to the Pentagon-run
Arab satellite station al-Hurra (the freedom), Bush said reiterated
he was “appalled” at broadcast images of Iraq’s
naked and hooded. He pledged a full investigation and accountability
for what he insisted were the actions of a few...
more
May
4 - Killing the Followers of Sadr
Baghdad, Iraq -- Dozens of followers of Muqtada al-Sadr sing
songs of martyrdom as they carry the coffins of two of their
slain comrades into the shrine of the revered Imam Ali in
the Iraqi Holy City, Najaf. Every night, Sadr's fighters engage
in pitched battle with the US military which has placed its
tanks and soldiers just outside the city limits. But that's
not where these men died...
more
May 3 - Fallujah Begins to Bury Its Dead
Baghdad, Iraq -- A team of local volunteers in surgical masks
lift the rotting corpse of a middle aged woman from its shallow
grave in the front yard of a single family home. The owner
of the house explains the woman has been lying dead in his
front yard for three weeks. He says an American war-plane
bombed her car as she fled the city with her husband, who
is buried in the garden of the house next door. The destroyed
remains of the car still smolder a few meters away from his
front door... more
April
30 - More American Air Attacks on Fallujah
Baghdad, Iraq -- George Bush says he'll "take care"
of the soldiers who photographed themselves laughing, lording
over naked bodies of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib -- formerly
Saddam Hussein's most notorious lockup, which currently holds
about 15,000 prisoners. Speaking at a White House Rose Garden
during an appearance with Prime Minister Paul Martin of Canada
he said: "Their treatment does not reflect the nature
of the American people. That's not the way we do things in
America."... more
April
28 - More Horror Stories from Abu Ghraib
Baghdad, Iraq -- US Marines launched a fresh assault on the
besieged Iraqi city of Fallujah today, sending in air strikes
and tanks. Shelling and fierce exchanges of gunfire broke
out in mid-afternoon in the northwestern district of Golan,
already pounded overnight by a heavy airborne AC-130 gunship,
first used in Vietnam...
more
April
27 - America Attacks Najaf
Baghdad, Iraq -- U.S. troops backed by helicopter gunships
have entered the holy Shiite city of Najaf, clashing with
the Mehdi Army of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. The
US military says 64 Iraqi fighters were killed, though hospital
officials in Najaf told the Arab satellite network al-Jazeera
most of the 28 injured received from the clashes appear to
be civilians... more
April 26 - Fallujah Siege Yields It's First
Tent City
Baghdad, Iraq -- New families seem to arrive every hour at
the Iraqi Red Crescent refugee camp in West Baghdad. The camp
-- the first tent city erected as a result of the American
assault on Fallujah holds more than 50 families, a small fraction
of the tens of thousands of civilians forced to flee their
homes. These families are the most desperate -- unable to
find housing with with family or friends...
more
April
22 - More US Money and Clout for Chalabi Family
Baghdad, Iraq -- This US occupation authority announced its
choice to prosecute Saddam Hussein this week: Salem Chalabi
-- the nephew of Iraqi National Congress Chief Ahmed Chalabi,
whose organization had been funded by the Central Intelligence
Agency for more than a decade before last year's war. But
the Bush administration's choice of Saddam's prosecutor isn't
the only way the Chalabi is benefiting from the occupation...
more
April
20 - Prisoners of War in Iraq
Baghdad, Iraq -- Iraqi insurgents have taken their first American
soldier prisoner since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Private
First Class Matt Maupin, was assigned to the Army Reserve's
724th Transportation Company, based at Bartonville, Ill.,
near Peoria. In footage first shown Friday on the Arab Satellite
Channel al-Jazeera, Maupin did not appear hurt but was surrounded
by insurgents who offered to exchange him for imprisoned Iraqis.
The US military is currently holding more than 20,000 Iraqi's
behind bars... more
April
19 - Drugs in Short Supply in Baghdad Hospitals
Baghdad, Iraq -- A long line of patients snake towards to
door of the pharmacy at Yarmuk hospital in Baghdad's primarily
Sunni neighborhood, al-Monseur. A worried woman holds the
hand of her 21 year old son and clutches a small packet of
pills. Ten tablets of Thyroxin, enough for ten days. It's
the first time she's been able to find the drug in four months...
more
April
14 - American Troops Surround Holy City
Baghdad, Iraq -- Iraq's Grand Ayatollah Sayyid Ali al-Husseini
al-Sistani has warned the Occupation forces not to assault
the holy cities of Karbala and Najaf. In a statement, Sistani
said the religious authority should use its weapon to defend
Iraqis rights in case the Occupation forces entered the two
cities. American troops have surrounded Najaf -- which holds
the shrine of revered Imam Ali and are threatening to invade
it... more
April
13 - US Marines Shoot Ambulances in Fallujah
Baghdad, Iraq -- Speaking from his ranch in Crawford, Texas
the President the United States, George W. Bush told reporters
American soldiers have acted against, quote: "lawlessness
and gangs" in Iraq in the past week. The American theater
commander in Fallujah told Britain's Guardian newspaper 95
percent of those killed in the assault on the city are armed
militants. But that's not the story coming from Fallujah's
temporary emergency clinics...
more
April
12 - More than 600 Killed in Fallujah
Baghdad, Iraq -- The story of Yusuf Fakri Amash is the story
of Fallujah. The 11 year old boy just escaped from Fallujah
with his family. But not before the US military killed his
best friend. "Ahmed was in my class," he says. "He
was younger than me. He was standing next to the wall of the
secondary school. He was trying to cross the street and he
was hit by a bullet. The American troops fired the bullet...
more
April
7 - The Dead Keep Piling Up In Iraq
Diala, Iraq -- The dead keep piling up in Fallujah. More than
200 Iraqi dead in the last 24 hours -- Hospital officials
report sixteen children and eight women were reported killed
when warplanes struck four houses late last night. 40 more
Iraqi's died when American helicopter gun-ships fired on a
neighborhood mosque while it was filled with worshippers.
30 American soldiers are also dead...
more
April
7 - American Apache Helicopters vs. Iraqi Residential Neighborhoods
Baghdad, Iraq -- Hundreds of young men fire machine guns into
the air as their comrades carry the coffin of a dead boy into
Baghdad's abu Hanifa Mosque. Last night -- while the American
Army dug trenches around Fallujah -- the Sunni resistance
struck Iraq's Capital City, falling on an American Hum-Vee
patrol. The US Army responded with Apache attack helicopters.
The only victim: a young boy standing unarmed in front of
the mosque watching the action unfold...
more
April
5 - Going After al-Sadr
As the U.S. military attempts to apprehend radical cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr and crush his army of angry -- mostly poor
Shi'ite men, 15 year old Ali Hussein lies in a hospital -
an American bullet lodged in his gut. He's barely able to
lift his head, but he wants to say a few words to the American
reporter: "I was standing in my door-way and I was shot,"...
more
April
2 - Will the US Army Attack the (Turkish) Kurds?
Baghdad, Iraq -- American soldiers could be on the verge of
fighting another war in the Middle East. In Washington for
meetings with US military leaders, the Deputy Chief of the
Turkish Army General Staff demanded the US Army start fighting
against against approximately 5,000 Turkish Kurdish guerillas...
more
April
1 - The Grisly Deaths of Thousands of Iraqis
Baghdad, Iraq -- American officials have been quick to condemn
yesterday's killing of three American contractors in Fallugah.
The charred remains of the contractors, retired military men
working for North Carolina's Blackwater Security Consulting
were pulled from the wreckage of their burning car by jubilant
Iraqis who beat them with sticks before dragging them through
town... more
March
30 - US Troops Close Another Newspaper
Baghdad, Iraq -- A US military Apache helicopter circles over
the shuttered offices of the Shi'ite newspaper - al-Hawza.
A sign on the pad-locked gate indicates anyone who enters
will be arrested. The paper's editors and reporters are in
hiding -- seeking to avoid arrest and indefinite detention...
more
March
26 - More than 10,000 Iraqi's Still Inside Saddam's Most-Feared
Prison
Anu Ghraib, Iraq -- Noon-time and dozens of families have
gathered outside Abu Grahb prison seeking a chance to get
an appointment for the their loved ones. They gather around
the razor wire that surrounds the prison. Each holds a scrap
of paper with a number. If their number is called, they are
allowed to go inside. Ali Ahmed's brother is among those incarcerated
here... more
March
23 - US Increasing House Demolitions and Indefinite Detentions In Iraq
Baghdad, Iraq -- Two thousand Iraqi's marched through the
center of Baghdad today to protest Israel's killing of Hamas
leader Sheik Ahmed Yassin. It's a demonstration that's not
surprising given the increased cooperation...
more
March
19 - One Year of Occupation
Baghdad, Iraq -- Friday afternoon and the mosques of Baghdad
open up. Two weeks after bomb blasts in Baghdad and Karbala
killed hundreds of Shi'ite pilgrims, thousands of Shi'ite
and Sunni men converge Aritar Square addressed by what Iraq's
clergy hope will become a united stand against the Americans...
more
March
18 - From the Wreckage of the Lebanon Hotel
Baghdad, Iraq -- Ambulances rush to the scene as American
troops pull bodies from the rubble of the Lebanon Hotel. One
soldier on top of a tank points his machine gun at me and
screams no reporters. At least twenty people are dead. Most
of them Iraqi. Survivors gather a block away...
more
March
17 - On the Anniversary of Halabja
Benslawa, Iraq -- The Bush Administration likes to talk about
Halabja. On March 16, 1988, the Iraqi military dropped deadlyserin
gas on the Kurdish city of Halabja instantaly killing 5,000
civilians and making the rest of the area's population refugees.
In Halabja yesterday for anniversary comemorations, US Administrator
Paul Bremer said... more
March
16 - America Bombed This House
Domiz, Northern Iraq -- 25-year old Musla Ibrahim stands atop
the remains of his house. The rubble is twenty feet high in
parts with iron rods sticking out of stray cinderblocks every
which way. A year ago, American cruise missiles destroyed
this house and two of his neighbors. 8 of Musla's cousins
perished in the blasts, two more were injured...
more
March
10 - Oil Workers Want Some Oil Money
Kirkuk, Iraq -- Dick Cheney's old company Halliburton may
have gotten more than $2 billion for the "reconstrutcion
of Iraq," but that doesn't mean the contract's benefits
are trickling down to the average Iraqi. Even the average
Iraqi oil worker... more
March
8 - The Authors of Iraq's New "Constitution"
Arbil, Iraq -- Even Ahmed Chalabi knows today's constitutional
signing ceremony isn't the real deal. The head of the Iraqi
National Congress -- who was airlifted to Baghdad by the US
military last April -- is the same man who fled Jordan in
the trunk of a car after being convicted of stealing $350
million from that country's national bank. Now his signature
is on Iraq's new governing document -- along with two dozen
others hand-picked by the Bush Administration. ...
more
March
4 - The Other Occupation of Iraq (Part One)
Arbil, Iraq -- Looking at the faces of the troops behind the
razor wire-fenced four-floor military compound in the center
of the Northern Iraqi city of Arbil, at least one fact becomes
immediately apparent: its not just George Bush and his "coalition
of the willing" that are occupying Iraq. The man in the
watch-tower is Turkish and so is his commanding officer. But
they're not in the mood to talk...
more
March
3 - Who's Backing the Terrorists?
Kirkuk, Iraq - Who's backing the terrorists? That's a question
many here are asking after Tuesday's twin bombings of Shi'ite
religious celebrations in Baghdad and Karbala. Most people
don't seem to think it's al-Qaeda...
more
March
1 - Welcome to Iraqi Kurdistan
"Welcome to Iraqi Kurdistan" says the sign at the
Iraq's Northern border crossing in Zakho. The Kurdish flag
flies nearby. There's a life-sized portrait of Kurdistan Democratic
Party leader Massoud Barzani where Saddam Hussein's portrait
used to be. Kalashnikov-toting peshmerga guerilla fighters
maintain regular check-points on the main roads. There isn't
an American soldier in sight...
more
Feb
25 - Iraq's Oil; Turkey and America
How greedy can Washington get when it comes to Middle East
oil? Apparently the combined efforts of the Bush Administration
and Wall Street don't stop with oil-rich countries like Iraq,
Iran, and Saudi Arabia...
more
Feb
23 - Human Rights Activist Ahmet Faruk Unsal
Ahmet Faruk Unsal is a member of the Turkish Parliament from
the ruling Islamic AK (Justice and Development Parti). A driving
force behind the Turkish Parliament historic refusal last
year to allow George Bush to launch a second front on Iraq
from Turkish soil, Unsal is also a human rights activist and
a board member of Amnesty International. We spoke to him at
his office in the capital Ankara...
more
Feb
20 - Kurdish Leader Won't Be Free
The Bush Administration likes to think its allies in the Middle
East are democratic. Asked today by Fox News if there "was
ever a Muslim country that respects minorities" Rumsfeld
replied "you need look no further than Turkey for a Muslim
country that has a democratic system, a system that's respectful
of people in the country of differing religions and differing
views." ... more
In
2003 Aaron Glantz spent 6 months traveling through Turkey,
Jordan, and Iraq for Pacifica's Peacewatch
and Free Speech Radio News.
Aaron is also helping to implement Free Speech Radio News'
international outreach and training program. As part of this
program, he has provided training to journalists who are now
reporting for FSRN from India, Turkey, Jordan, Indonesia,
and South Korea.
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